243 Mass. 536 | Mass. | 1923
The plaintiff was injured April 4, 1918, in consequence of a large manure pile falling on him. He was in the employment' of the defendants who carried on a market garden farm in Arlington. On the morning of the accident one of the defendants directed the plaintiff to get a load of manure from a manure pile which was on their farm, about three quarters of a mile from the place where the directions were given. Another employee had preceded the plaintiff and he was loading his cart when the plaintiff arrived. The manure pile was from four to eleven feet high “and as long as the length of three railroad cars.” The plaintiff saw the fellow employee taking manure from a hole in the pile near the edge which was approximately three or four feet square. The plaintiff knew that the pile had been out all winter and that the top was frozen. He testified that “he had looked at the bank for fear it would fall . . . Hand] that he did not intend to go into the hole as he knew it was not safe; ” that “while standing about four feet from the hole at the base of the pile . . . the bank fell in upon him.”
The plaintiff was an experienced farm laborer and had been employed at this work for thirteen years. He had performed all kinds of farm work, including “similar work at other manure piles.” The declaration alleges that the plaintiff’s injuries were caused by the negligence of the defendants, in that they failed to provide him with a safe place in which to work, and failed properly to warn him of the dangers of the work “of which the plaintiff was ignorant and which the defendants knew or ought to have known.” In the Superior Court, on the defendants’ motion, a verdict was directed for the defendants.
There was no evidence of the defendants’ negligence. They did not know of the condition of the manure pile when the plaintiff was directed to go to it and get the manure. The employer gave the directions to the plaintiff when they were both at the greenhouse, three quarters of a mile away, and the existence of the hole was not known to him. He did not know of the condition in which the pile was left by reason of the work previously done on it, nor that there was any danger of its falling. There was no duty on the part of the defendants to warn the plaintiff that the manure pile might fall, or instruct him concerning this danger. He knew, or ought to have known by reason of his experience, the risk to which he was exposed and the danger to be avoided from the falling of the frozen manure pile. The case is governed by Regan v. Lombard, 181 Mass. 329, Sampson v. Holbrook, 192 Mass. 421, Boisvert v. Ward, 199 Mass. 594, Lynch v. Larivee Lumber Co. 223 Mass. 335. The verdict for the defendants was ordered rightly.
Exceptions overruled.