83 P. 867 | Or. | 1905
Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion.
This is a second appeal by plaintiff in this action, he having failed to secure a verdict and judgment, of which he complains. The facts developed at the trial are substantially the same as those appearing at the former trial. The statement thereof as formerly made (43 Or. 438, 73 Pac. 330) will therefore suffice for the present.
The pivotal, and, as we have concluded, the vital, question impending, arises upon the defendant’s attempt to
“What would be the custom of using a rope of that kind, as to who should call attention to the fact as to whether or not the rope was sufficient to stand the use?”
And again :
“What would be the. custom of an ordinarily prudent man engaged in that business, where a supply of ropes are furnished and on hand from which selections could be made by the servants in charge, in using a rope of that kind, as to who should call attention to the fact as to whether or not the rope was sufficient to stand the use?”
Bridges was asked:
“What is the custom, among reasonably prudent men engaged in your business, as to who should look out for the ropes when a number of ropes are accessible?”
And Marshall was asked:
“What arrangements, if any, were made for the replacing of rope which became defective?”.
He answered :
“There was plenty there to pick from. It was’understood, if a man was handling the ropes, the man looked at the rope he was using, and if there was anything wrong with it — ”
Here was an interruption, and later the following question was propounded:
“What is the general custom, in work of that kind, as to replacing defective ropes ?”
“In this city, wherever a man goes to work with a rope, he is supposed to look at the ropes and pick one out to suit himself, if there are ropes there, and if there is any thing wrong with the rope he leaves it, and reports it to the party that supplies the ropes, if there is no other rope there. It is just like making a scaffold. When a man is putting up a scaffold, one man for another, the man going out on the scaffold looks to see whether the scaffold is safe.”
Thus, in Brady v. Norcross, 172 Mass. 331 (52 N. E. 528), an action to recover damages for an injury received from a fall occasioned by the giving way of a temporary staging upon which plaintiff, one of the workmen, was engaged in the course of his employment, it was stated as a rule of law applicable in the case that, “if the plaintiff’s employers furnished sufficient quantities of suitable materials for staging, employed suitable workmen, and did not themselves undertake the duty of furnishing the staging as a structure, but only of supplying materials and labor by which it might be built and from time to time adapted to the work, and if the duty of furnishing or adapting the staging as an appliance for use in the work of finishing
A pertinent example is instanced in Robinson v. Blake Mfg. Co., 143 Mass. 528, 533 (10 N. E. 314), which supposes that the work to be done was the moving of a heavy substance, requiring the use of a simple fulcrum and lever, and the employer’s foreman in charge of the work should
These cases are illustrative of the principles which we are impressed, govern in the present instance, and we will cite still another: Great Northern Ry. Co. v. McLaughlin, 70 Fed. 669 (17 C. C. A. 330). The injury was caused by a steel rail falling upon plaintiff while he was engaged with others in loading it upon a car. One Johnson, who was foreman of the yard, hired and discharged the workmen and directed their work. In the absence of plaintiff, who was directed to help with the work, the foreman selected some skids .to be used in the loading from a number lying in the yard. The workmen suggested to the foreman that one of them was too short, and was, therefore, unsafe, and objected to its use; but the latter further
Other questions were presented, but the conclusion reached renders it unnecessary that we should consider them now. Reversed.
Rehearing
On Motion for Rehearing.
delevered the opinion.
Reversed : ReheariNG DeNIed.