100 A. 545 | N.H. | 1917
"If the work involves the preparation of a workplace, providing such a place is the duty of the servant and not of the master. The master's duty ends with providing suitable tools and materials for such purpose." Sanborn v. Railroad,
The case is governed by the rule laid down in Haakensen v. Company,
It is also argued that the board which broke contained a secret defect of which the defendant should have known. It is said that the fact that the board was partly covered with lime made detection of the defect difficult, and that therefore it should not have been included with those furnished for this use. But there is no evidence that it was in this condition when furnished by the defendant. If it became so in the course of the work, and if it can be found, as a matter of common knowledge, that such condition made the use dangerous, then the plaintiff and his associates, being presumed to possess such common knowledge, were in fault for selecting material which had become unsafe as the work progressed.
There is no direct evidence that the board contained a secret defect, or that its condition would conceal a defect discoverable in *377 a clean board. Common knowledge is relied upon to prove that the board was in the nature of a trap and calculated to deceive the plaintiff. But the same inference from common knowledge which would establish the existence of the secret danger, must be applied throughout. So applied, it proves the knowledge of the plaintiff and his associates of the danger incident to using such a board, and would admonish them to reject this as unsafe and in its stead use some of the other available material.
As to this feature of the case the plaintiff knew all that the evidence showed that the defendant knew. It would only be upon proof that the defendant furnished this board in an unsafe and disguised condition, representing it to be sound, that the plaintiff could recover. If there had been evidence that the board was in such a condition when furnished by the defendant, and that he ought to have understood that the men might use it for this purpose, believing it to be sound because it was so furnished, it could have been found that the master was in fault. But, as before stated, there was no evidence to warrant a finding that the board was so furnished, and the nonsuit was properly ordered.
The rule laid down in Marston v. Portsmouth, ante, 223, that the master may be liable for defects in instrumentalities developing in the course of the work, has no application to the facts here presented. That rule applies only when the master "knew or ought to have known of this danger" while the servant "neither knew nor was in fault for not knowing of it." Ib. The plaintiff here being a man of thirty-five years' experience, it could not be found that he was inexperienced, so as to be entitled to warning against the dangers ordinarily incident to his work.
Exception overruled.
All concurred. *378