127 P. 89 | Mont. | 1912
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action was brought to recover damages for injuries received by plaintiff while working as a miner for the defendant at Kendall, Montana. He recovered, and defendant appealed from the judgment and from an order denying it a new trial.
The plaintiff and two other men, constituting a shift, were engaged in sinking a prospect shaft which at the time of the accident was about 35 feet deep. The debris from the bottom of the shaft was raised by means of a windlass, rope and bucket. The collar of the shaft was boarded over, except that a space about four feet square was left through which the bucket was raised and lowered. Rails were laid on two sides of this opening and extended away from the shaft to a dump. On these rails was run a small flat car to carry the bucket of debris to the dump. The top or platform of the car was about sixteen inches from the ground, and was sufficiently large to completely cover the opening at the collar of the shaft when the ear was run under the windlass to receive or deliver the bucket. For the purpose of stopping the ear at the proper place and holding it there while the bucket was attached or detached, a block or bumper was placed over one rail on the side of the opening opposite the dump. One man filled the bucket at the bottom of the shaft, and the other two operated the windlass and raised the load to the surface, and to such a height that the car could be run under the bucket, when the bucket was lowered onto the car, the windlass rope detached from the bucket, and the
The evidence on the part of the plaintiff tends to show that the block or bumper was a piece of wood three inches thick, nailed to the platform which surrounded the opening at the collar of the shaft, and extended about one inch above and over one rail of the track; that these several appliances had been in constant use by three shifts each day for a week or ten days; that they were in place at the time the plaintiff went to work, and that the flange on the car wheel coming in contact with the bumper had worn a groove into the piece of wood. Plaintiff’s theory is that because of this groove and of the thinness of the bumper a slight force was sufficient to cause the ear to move forward over the bumper, and the evidence of the plaintiff himself is that, when he returned the ear with the empty bucket to the collar of the shaft, the ear was brought to a full stop under the windlass, and, when he stepped on the car to attach the rope to the bucket, the car moved forward over the bumper, causing him to fall down the shaft. The defendant interposed the pleas of assumption of risk and contributory
1. Assumption of Bish. The contention of appellant is that for. more than a week the plaintiff was working about the collar of the shaft; that the block or bumper was in plain sight; that plaintiff in fact saw it frequently; that at least he is chargeable with knowledge of its worn condition; that he must have appreciated the danger from its continued use; that he failed to complain, and therefore must be held to have assumed the risk. The evidence discloses that plaintiff had seen the bumper a number of times, but he did not know how thick it was, how high it. projected above the rail, or whether it was over one rail or over both rails. He testified that he had confidence in the defendant; that he did not have any idea the car would go over the bumper; that he had never noticed that the flange of the ear wheel had cut a groove in the bumper at all; and that there was any danger from using the bumper had never entered his mind. So frequently has the question of assumption of risk arisen, that the principles of law controlling the doctrine have become well settled, and with respect to them there is little, if any, contrariety of opinion. The only difficulty arises in applying them to a given state of facts.
In Fotheringill v. Washoe Copper Co., 43 Mont. 485, 117 Pac. 86, this court said: “As the rule is commonly stated, it is to the effect that the servant assumes all the usual and ordinary risks attendant upon his employment, not including risks arising from the negligence of the master, and that he assumes the latter as well, if he knows of the defects from which they arise and appreciates the dangers which flow from such defects.” From the evidence before us we may say that the bumper was defective, in that it was not thick enough in the first instance, and that it was permitted to become out of repair, in the second; but whether plaintiff is chargeable with knowledge of these facts is altogether a different question. As said by this court in McCabe v. Montana Central Ry. Co., 30 Mont. 323, 76 Pac. 701: “The faculty of close observation of objects is largely a gift. Some persons may walk once along a street and be able, with
But the record before us discloses that these appliances had been in use there only for a -week or ten days, and, of course, the degree of impairment in the block depended upon the force and frequency with which it was struck, the weight of the ear, the condition of the wheel flange, the character of the wood in the block to withstand the cutting force of the car wheel, and probably other conditions and circumstances. When placed in position, the block was undoubtedly considered adequate by
2. Contributory Negligence. The defendant charged the plaintiff with negligence which directly contributed to his own injury, in that, it is alleged, when plaintiff had emptied the bucket at the dump and had placed it upon the car, he gave the car a start back toward the shaft and then mounted the car and rode on it; that the car came with great speed toward the shaft and came in contact with the bumper with great force, by reason whereof plaintiff was either thrown, or carelessly stepped or jumped from the car, sustaining the injuries of which he complains. In argument counsel for appellant insisted: (a) That it was unnecessary for plaintiff to get upon the car to
3. Objection was made to the introduction of certain expert testimony on behalf of plaintiff. The question now raised was set at rest by this court in Copenhaver v. Northern Pacific Ry. Co., 42 Mont. 453, 113 Pac. 467.
4. The placing of the bumper was so plainly a part of the
5. There is a conflict between instructions 3 and 15 given by
6. Plaintiff alleged in his complaint that it was necessary for him to step upon the car in order to attach the windlass rope to the bucket. This allegation was denied in the answer, and defendant requested the court to charge that it was incumbent upon plaintiff to prove the allegation as made. The court declined to do so, but gave instruction 3a, which reads as follows: “It is not essential that it shall appear from the evidence that the plaintiff was absolutely required to Mount the ear in order to fasten the cable or rope. If the method of doing the work he followed was customarily pursued by the men engaged in it, or was one of the methods customarily pursued, and was a reasonably safe method, the plaintiff is not chargeable with contributory negligence in following it on the occasion when he was injured.”
The rule is elementary that the plaintiff must prove every
In section 8, Article I, of the Constitution of the United States, the Congress is authorized “to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing po.wers, and all other powers vested by this Constitution in the government of the United States, or in any department or officer thereof”; but it was never intended to limit the congressional power to passing only such laws as are indispensable to those ends. When the restricted meaning was intended by the framers of the Constitution, they used the qualifying word “absolutely,” as in section 10 of the same Article, “No state shall, without the consent of Congress, lay any imposts or duties on imports or exports, except what may be absolutely necessary for executing its inspection laws.” (McCulloch v. Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316, 4 L. Ed. 579.) In a suit upon a bottomry bond for money advanced to supply a ship “with necessary repairs,” Justice Story in circuit said: “But a thorough examination of the common text-writers, ancient as well as modern, will, as I think, satisfactorily show that they have all understood the language in a very mitigated sense, and that necessary repairs mean such as are reasonably fit and proper for the ship under the circumstances, and not merely such as are absolutely indispensable for the safety of the ship or the accomplishment of the voyage.” In a statute which requires a railroad to install farm crossings where necessary, the word “necessary” was held to mean reasonably convenient. (Chalcraft v. Louisville, E. & St. L. R. Go., 113 Ill. 86.) But a multiplication of citations is unnecessary. A reference to 5 Words & Phrases, 4705, discloses the liberality with which the word “necessary” has been treated by the courts. The language of the complaint is the language of eminent counsel familiar with the adjudications, and it is but fair to assume that they employed the word “necessary” in the light of these adjudications, and intended that it should receive a liberal defi
The judgment and order are affirmed.
Affirmed.