This action was brought by plaintiff, as administratrix of the estate of Penial J. Garfield, deceased, for damages by reason of the death of her husband, caused, as she alleges, by the negligence of defendants. Plaintiff recovered judgment below, and defendants appeal.
Defendants were engaged in the business of manufacturing and selling tombstones and monuments. In the course of their business, they handled large quantities of heavy stones, many of them weighing several tons each. These stones were purchased in carload lots, hauled by wagon from the cars, and piled in the yard adjacent to their shop. When the stones were brought to the yard, they were handled with a traveling crane. The business was under the charge of defendants themselves. No superintendent or boss of any kind was employed in or about their yards. ' When defendants were both away, every man in the shop was his own boss.. When any of the workmen in the shop desired a stone from the yard, he would himself go to the yard, select the stone desired, and convey the same by use of the traveling crane into the shop. If any assistance was needed or desired, he would call some other employee to assist him. When the stones were placed in the yard, each stone would, be elevated above the ground two inches or so by placing under it what are termed “chips of stone”; that is to say, pieces of stone which had been broken or chipped off of the larger slabs. This was done so that the chain could be slipped out at the time the stone was deposited, and in
The answer admits the partnership and the business in which defendants were engaged; admits that the deceased, together with , Solomon Garfield, was on March 4, 1909, raising a large stone; that Solomon Garfield stepped upon two adjacent stones and caused the upper one of said two stones to slide off, fall upon deceased, and injure his leg. Defendants aver that Solomon Garfield was at that time an employee of defendants and a fellow servant with the deceased; that the stone B was placed upon the stone A either by the deceased or by Solomon Garfield, or some other employee of defendants, a fellow servant of deceased, all without the consent or knowledge of defendants; that the accident happened in broad daylight; that deceased had been employed by defendants for many years, and was more familiar with the condition and situation of the various stones in the yard than defendants; that deceased, by the exercise of ordinary and reasonable care, could have known, and, as a matter of fact, did know, prior to the time of the accident, the exact condition and situation of the stones A and B; that it was the duty of deceased to attend to bringing into defendants’ shop stone G; that in the performance of said duty deceased was the sole judge of the method and means of getting said stone into the shop; that it was likewise his duty to take all precautions necessary to ascertain and learn that the place where he was working was perfectly safe, not only for himself, but likewise for his fellow serv
It will be observed that the issue of negligence on the part of defendants, as tendered by the petition, is clean cut. Succinctly stated, it is that defendants were negligent in permitting the stone A to remain in a nearly balanced condition after the other portion of it had been removed on January 20, and negligent in putting stone B on top of stone A shortly after January 20, and permitting the two stones A and B to remain in that condition for five or six weeks, and until the time of the accident on March 4. No other acts of negligence, either general or specific,, are alleged. A careful examination of the record shows that plaintiff failed to prove either of the acts of negligence alleged. Solomon Garfield, the brother of deceased, who was present with him at the time of the accident, when called as a Avitness for plaintiff, testified: “Q. Did you at any time see any one set that top stone? A. No, sir. Q. Do you know when that top stone was set up there? A. No, sir; I do not.” No Avitness produced by
For the defendants, it was shown by the witness Whitenack that he was the employee who cut stone A and removed the west two-thirds thereof, and that after he had broken the stone and removed the west portion he thought the portion which he left was perfectly safe. At least one other witness testified that stone A, in the condition in which it was left by Whitenack, was perfectly safe. The testimony of at least two witnesses shows that as late as two days prior to the accident there was no stone resting on top of stone A, and that stone B was still, at that late date, resting on stone C. Not a single witness is produced to prove that defendants or any of their .employees placed stone B on top of stone A, or that it" was ever seen on top of stone A prior to the time that Solomon Garfield went into the yard to help liis brother elevate stone C a few moments before the accident. Mr. Whitenack testified that when an employee would go to the yard to obtain a stone, if he found another stone resting upon it, he would have the upper stone removed. The testimony of other witnesses is that when the deceased went into the yard that morning, if he found stone B resting upon stone C and desired to take the latter stone into the shop, there was plenty of room to have deposited stone B upon the ground without putting it on top of stone A. It was also shown by the testimony of Solomon Garfield that whoever placed stone B on top of stone A placed between the two, as supports for stone B, four car-stakes, three .inches thick, with tapered ends. All of the testimony above noted stands in the record uncontradicted. In the light of this clear and undisputed testimony, we do not see how unbiased minds could fail to reach any other conclusion than that, when the deceased went into the yard that morning to select a stone, and selected stone C, he found stone B resting upon it, and that he himself (which he could easily do with the use of the crane) removed stone B from stone C and placed it upon stone A. But
We are unable to agree with counsel that the failure of Whitenack or the defendants to place any additional blocking stones under stone A after Whitenack had removed 'the west two-thirds thereof, left that stone in a dangerous condition. Conceding that stone A was thereafter in a nearly balanced condition, and giving the benefit of every doubt against the testimony of Mr. Whitenack that when he removed the other portion the portion remaining tipped back against the post, and giving no weight to the testimony of Mr. Baldwin that it would have taken five or six hundred pounds to tip it the Avay in which it was tipped at the time of the accident, the fact would still remain that the stone in its then condition was not dangerous, for it could not tip more than about two inches, so that, if it had been so nearly balanced that the weight of a man stepping upon the west end would have tilted it, the tilt would have been so slight that it could not have caused any injury to' the one who stepped upon it. The fact, therefore, that the defendants, or either of them, may have seen stone A in that condition prior to the injury, and did nothing to change its condition, would not be negligence on their part, for the reason that there Avas nothing to cause them to suspect that any one would place another stone on top of it, or that, if they did so. they would place betAveen the íavo, as supports for the second stone, car-stakes with tapered ends. The evidence also shows that the deceased had worked for the defend
The judgment of the district court is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
Reversed.