128 Minn. 122 | Minn. | 1914
This is an action to recover for personal injuries. Plaintiff had .a verdict, and defendant appealed from an order denying its motion .for judgment notwithstanding or for a new trial.
It is a matter of some difficulty to state the facts so they will be -clearly understood. Plaintiff had worked for defendant as a bridge builder for five years prior to his injury. December 5, 1912, he, with three other men, was directed to chip away rock at the head of -the lower bridge chords on the east parapet of defendant’s bridge • crossing the Bed Lake river at Crookston. The lower chords of the bridge are of steel and rest on stone abutments. In order to take -care of the expansion and contraction of the chords it is necessary from time to time to chip away the surface of the stone parapet in front of the chord. This is the work that plaintiff and the other men were directed to do and were doing at the time of the accident. 'The place in which plaintiff was required to do this work was a ■triangular or “V” shaped area on the easterly side of the south end • of the bridge structure. Along the easterly side of this area the stone abutment continued in the form of a perpendicular wall to a height •of six feet and a half, with an overlapping coping at the top. On the westerly side is the chord of the bridge resting on a device known as a roller easting which rests on an iron plate on the stone floor of the abutment. This roller casting extended into the open space five 'inches, and was 30 inches long and five inches in height above the floor. The triangular area was approximately two feet in width -at the north end, and tapered back to a few inches at the south end; it was four feet in length. The stone floor of the space was 13 feet above the frozen river below! In chipping the stone back of the end of the chord or girder, plaintiff used a hammer and chisel, standing with his left foot on the stone floor and his right on the roller casting. There were four bolts through this roller casting, ;and the nuts protruded an inch and a quarter above it. These nuts were nine inches apart. Plaintiff’s right foot was placed between two of them. It was about two feet from where plaintiff stood in ■ doing his work to the outer edge of the floor of the space. During -.the day before the accident happened and during a portion of the
The only negligence charged is that defendant failed to furnish plaintiff a safe place to work. The claim in this regard, and the only claim, is that defendant should have constructed and placed in the “V” shaped space a wooden platform, covering its entire area, including the roller casting. Carpenters testified that this could have been done. Such a platform would have covered the casting and the projecting nuts of the bolts, and would have been five inches above the stone floor. It would have made the space somewhat wider at the apex and probably would have given somewhat more room for men to stand in doing the work of chipping stone. But we are wholly unable to see that a finding of negligence is justified because such a platform was not built into the space. In no respect would it make the place any safer, unless it be because the platform would cover the roller casting and the nuts.that protruded above it. How these nuts were a source of danger to men working in the space we are unable to see. On the contrary it would seem that they were an effective prevention against the slipping of the workman’s foot, which is apparently the chief if not the only danger to be feared. A wooden platform, when covered with snow and ice, does not suggest itself as particularly safe, or a better guard against a workman’s slipping and losing his balance than was the rough stone floor on which to rest the left foot and the nuts on the roller casting against which the right foot could rest. The place was dangerous in no
Order reversed and judgment for defendant ordered.
On January 15, 1915, the following opinion was filed:
The application for a reargument of this case is denied. At the request of plaintiff’s counsel, the opinion is amended by adding at the end thereof before the words “Order reversed,” the following paragraph:
“The bridge was used by trains carrying interstate commerce. We decide that the facts proven do not make out a case of negligence in failing to furnish a reasonably safe place within the meaning of the Federal Employer’s Liability Act.”