105 P. 794 | Idaho | 1909
— This action was commenced to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained
After alleging that the defendants are contractors, it is alleged that on September 27, 1907, and for a long time prior thereto, the defendants, as contractors, had a contract for the stone and brick work in the construction and erection of the Odd Fellows building in Boise City; that on that date, “and for a month prior thereto,” the plaintiff was in the employ of the defendants as a common laborer, working upon said' structure and building under the order of- said defendants and their agents; that said defendants were obliged to hoist and raise stone for building material from the ground floor of said structure to the second story thereof, to be from there taken and placed in the outside walls of said building; that it became necessary for them to have and maintain hoists, elevator, trucks and other appliances, and it was the duty of the defendants to maintain such appliances, etc., in a reasonably fit, safe and proper condition for such work; that they neglected, failed and omitted to perform said duty and did not have such appliances, etc., that were reasonably safe, proper and suitable for that work, but, on the contrary, furnished and maintained appliances for hoisting said stone which were dangerous, unsafe and unfit for such purpose; that said appliances consisted merely of a rope extending from the ground floor to a pulley fastened to a joist or timber above the second floor and running through said pulley down to a pulley upon the said ground floor, through which pulley it passed, and was attached to an appliance on said ground floor, used in connection with horse-power for raising said rope and hoisting said stone; the method and means of utilization of said appliance was by fastening and securing the said end of said rope to the stone to be lifted, whereupon by
The question raised by the demurrer is whether the complaint states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The argument contained in the brief upon this question groups itself around two principal heads, to wit: Contributory negligence and assumption of risk, and largely upon the question as to whether or not the complaint on its face alleges such a state of facts that the only conclusion that can be drawn therefrom is that whatever risk there was appertaining to such employment was assumed by the plaintiff.
The allegations of the complaint show that the plaintiff was working at the top of an open hole or shaft through which the material was drawn onto the second floor of the building. There is no allegation that the place where he was working and the platform upon which he was standing and performing his work was not reasonably safe and secure, or that the ropes and pulleys and other appliances were not reasonably safe and secure. The main complaint is centered on the wheelbarrow that was used in conveying stone from the hoist to the place of intended use. It appears from the allegations that the wheelbarrow was of the usual kind of such implement and had only one wheel, and it does not appear that there was any defect either in its construction or the manner in which it was being operated. It is not alleged that there was any defect in the ropes or pulleys by which the stones were elevated. There is no allegation that the plaintiff was required to stand or that it was necessary for him to stand
Under the decisions -of this court and the statute, sec. 4221, Rev. Codes, contributory negligence is a defense to be pleaded and proven by the defendant. (Hopkins v. Utah Northern Ry. Co., 2 Ida. 300, 13 Pac. 343; Adams v. Bunker Hill & Sullivan Min. Co., 12 Ida. 637, 89 Pac. 624, 11 L. R. A., N. S., 844; Crawford v. Bonner’s Ferry L. Co., 12 Ida. 678, 87 Pac. 998.) While that is the law in this state, it does not alter the rule that where the complaint itself shows that the negligence of the plaintiff was one of the. contributing causes of the injury or the proximate cause of the injury, plaintiff cannot recover. In Wheeler v. Oregon R. & N. Co., 16 Ida. 375, 102 Pac. 347, this court held that contributory negligence may be a question of law o-r fact alone or one of both law and fact; that where it becomes a question of fact, it must be submitted to the jury and proven as a defense, but where contributory negligence appears on the face of the complaint, it becomes one of law and may be taken advantage of by demurrer. With that rule in view, we will examine the allegations of the complaint.
The negligence complained of is that the ropes and pulleys used for hoisting and the wheelbarrow upon which the stone was loaded and wheeled away were not of the character of appliances that should have been used, and that defendants were negligent because they did not furnish a different kind of appliances. It is not claimed that there was any particular defect, latent or otherwise, in these appliances; they were not in any manner complicated pieces of machinery. There is no allegation that they were defective in any of their parts, but the main cause of complaint seems to be directed at the wheelbarrow, and the allegation is that it was not a fit implement or machine for the purpose of receiving the rock hoisted by said pulleys and ropes, but that some other machine or implement would have been better and safer for that purpose.
It is clear from the allegations that all of those appliances and the wheelbarrow , were of simple construction and easily
In Rush v. Mo. Pac. Ry. Co., 36 Kan. 129, 12 Pac. 582, the court said:
“Now, in such cases, an employer should certainly have the privilege of adopting the way or the plan which might seem best to him, and if, after adopting a plan, he should inform his employee as to which of the plans he had adopted or if the employee should obtain knowledge as to which of the plans had been adopted, without being expressly so informed, it could hardly be said that the employer was guilty of any culpable negligence as toward his employee, although it might be that the plan not adopted was the safer and the better plan.In all cases the continuance on the part of the servant in the master’s employment, with full knowledge of the danger, is either negligence or it is not negligence.. If it is negligence and injury results, then no recovery can be had because of the culpable contributory negligence of the servant; but if it is not negligence on the part of the servant, then neither can it be negligence on the part of the master. What the servant may lawfully do, without negligence, the master may lawfully hire him to do, without negligence. The master cannot be bound to take greater care of the servant than the servant can of himself. If the danger is such that an ordinarily prudent man could assume it without being guilty of negligence, then same facts and the same reasoning which would show this would also show that there could not be any culpable negligence or any breach of duty on the part of another person for hiring him to assume it. There cannot be negligence on the part of the one and not on the part of the other, where both are capable of understanding the danger and both are fully informed as to all of the facts.”
There is no allegation in the complaint to the effect that the appliances used were not of the ordinary kind nor such as were ordinarily used in buildings of the character of the one there being constructed. The allegations of the complaint show very clearly that whatever risk there might have been attached to the employment in which the plaintiff was engaged, was only such risk as was incident to such employment and was open, obvious and easily understood and was known to the plaintiff, or should have been known to him by the exercise of ordinary care and by the use of his ordinary faculties. However, it is alleged that the plaintiff was inexperienced in this class of work; but it is alleged that he had been engaged in that work for at least a month. The implement which immediately caused the injury was a wheelbarrow on which he had been wheeling stone for a month. It appears that in loading the wheelbarrow he stood between the handles, and he certainly knew that if the wheelbarrow tipped the handles would strike him, and that if they did strike him, he would in all probability be knocked down through the shaft. Had he stood in front of the wheelbarrow or at the side the handles would not have struck him when the wheelbarrow tipped. In 1 Labatt on Master and Servant, sec. 263, the author says:
“The recognition of the right of an employer to carry on his business in his own way, and to adopt any pattern or description of instrumentalities which he may prefer, involves the consequence that any risk which is due merely to the character of an instrumentality, and not to its abnormal condition or intrinsically defective quality, is to be deemed an ordinary risk of the employment.”
And in sec. 264 it is stated that risks created by permanent conditions incident to the business and openly conducted are assumed by the employee.
It is clear from the allegations of the complaint that whatever risk there was in said employment was assumed by the plaintiff, and that the trial court did not err in sustaining the demurrer and entering the judgment of dismissal. The judgment is affirmed. Costs are awarded to the respondents.