149 Iowa 41 | Iowa | 1910
At the first trial the only issue submitted to the jury was whether the defendant was negligent in
On the evening of July 12th James Nesmith, who was in charge of the work for defendant, went to Davenport to procure powder, and a few minutes prior to his return on the following morning a 'hole the drilling of which had just been completed had been sprung. As the train came in, plaintiff went down to the car some sixty or seventy feet distant. The work could not proceed until the hole was shot, and Nesmith immediately inquired if it was ready to shoot. Plaintiff responded that he had just sprung it. Nesmith said: “It_ don’t make a damn bit of difference. Co on (or hurry up) and load it. We have got to have (or I want to get) something done. We are all late.” Plaintiff took a can up to the hole, opened it, and laid it so that the powder would run in. The opening in the can was about an inch in diameter, and after a moment, observing the powder still running, he exhibited some of it to Nesmith, with the remark that it was finer than that which they had been using. He then put the powder back, and shortly afterwards reached down and lifted the can on end so all the powder would run out, when there was an explosion, seriously injuring him. The plaintiff was then about twenty-two years of age, had never noticed fire or cinders in the holes, but had observed dust of smoke arise therefrom, after explosions. He had never made a study of the subject, nor had he been informed as to the conditions probable after springing.' Previous to this no hole had been loaded within an hour after being sprung, and probably none had been sprung and loaded on the same day. For a more detailed statement of the record see opinion on the former appeal (139 Iowa, 314). The
When the master orders the servant to perform his work, the latter has a right to assume that the former with his superior knowledge of the facts, would not expose him to unnecessary perils. The servant has a right to rest upon the assurance that there is no danger, which is implied*47 by such order. The master and servant are not altogether upon a footing of equality. The primary duty of the latter is ‘ obedience, and he can not be charged with negligence in obeying an order of the master unless he acts recklessly in so obeying. Whether he acted thus recklessly in obeying his master’s order, or whether he acted as a reasonably prudent person should act, are questions of fact, to be determined by the jury.
Though the employee might have doubted the safety of loading the hole if left to his own judgment, the direction of the superintendent might have set all these doubts at rest and have induced him to do what he otherwise might not have done. Says Mr. Labatt in his work on Master and Servant, section 451: “An assurance of safety, like a specific order, may be regarded as having the effect of lulling the servant into a feeling of security, and give him good reason to believe that there was no need for the vigilance which he would otherwise have exercised.” That author also points out that though, in the absence of an order, the servant might be held to have been aware of the danger, and therefore to have been negligent, yet, if ordered by the master, he may be excused for yielding to his better information, judgment, or stronger will and held to have acted with ordinary prudence. Quoting from section 439:
“There is also a large class of cases in which that fact is treated as a differentiating element, and in which the courts apply a doctrine which, in so far as it is susceptible of formal enunciation, may be stated as follows: Although the circumstances, when abstracted from the fact of the giving of the order, may be such as to justify a court in holding that the servant appreciated the danger to which his injury was due, and was negligent in subjecting himself to that danger, such a conclusion is, in a large number of instances, not 'warrantable, if the testimony goes to show that the immediate occasion of his being subjected to that danger was his compliance with the order. The effect of this doctrine is that where the servant in obedience to an*48 order performed a duty which, though dangerous, is not so dangerous as to threaten immediate injury, or where it is reasonably probable that the work may be safely done by using more than ordinary caution or skill, he may recover if injured. I-t will be seen that this rule when analyzed amounts to nothing more than a statement that in determining what is ordinary care on the part of a given individual all the circumstances of his position should be regarded, including in cases like the present the servants orders, the demands of his duty, the apparent risk to be met, and the purpose of his action, no less than his physical surroundings. Having weighed all these considerations, unless the case then discloses that the risk was such as would not be taken by a man of common prudence so situated, the court can not justly declare that the taking of that risk by the servant in obedience to orders was negligent. The practical result of such a doctrine when stated in terms of the servant’s knowledge is that the servant may maintain an action, unless he not only knows what is the risk to be encountered, but also that it will probably be attended with injury which he can not avoid by the exercise of care and caution.
The general rule is that the servant may often be deemed to have used ordinary care when acting under the express invitation or advice of the master, even though but for that circumstance his conduct would be deemed clear evidence of negligence. Shear. & Red. Negligence, section 91. As said in Moline Plow Co. v. Anderson, 19 Ill. App. 417: “The law recognizes that under the influence of a direct and personal order or urging of this kind the master and servant do not stand on equality. The servant is not left to his cool judgment, but acts under the personal influence of the master, which for many obvious reasons is very great. The law makes allowance for this, and visits the consequence of the negligence on the master.” See Patterson v. Ry., 76 Pa. 389 (18 Am. Rep. 412); Chicago & N. W. Ry. v. Bayfield, 37 Mich. 205; Richmond & D. Ry. v. Rudd, 88 Va. 648 (14 S.
III. The contention that the court erred in not sub
If the plaintiff shall file a remittitur of the amount allowed in excess of $12,000, the judgment as so modified may stand; otherwise it will be reversed. — Affirmed on condition.