161 Mass. 138 | Mass. | 1894
The plaintiff was helping to unload stones raised from a wagon and swung into place by a hand derrick. His work was to guide them by a tag-rope, which was long enough to enable him to work in safety, and was provided for that purpose. He knew that there was danger that the chain by which a stone was suspended from the derrick might break and the stone fall. There was an open space three feet wide between the line of the stone which fell and a pile of stones on
The cases of Hackett v. Middlesex Manuf. Co. 101 Mass. 101, and Spicer v. South Boston Iron Co. 138 Mass. 426, relied on by the plaintiff, are not in point. In each of those cases the plaintiff was injured by the fall of part of a permanent structure, which he had a right to believe was in no danger of falling, while in the case at bar the appliances were in their nature temporary, and the danger that the stone might fall by the breaking of a chain vras known and understood. In the cases cited it was expected that the persons injured might in the usual course of their employment place themselves where they would be hurt if the structure above them gave way, while in the case at bar the plaintiff need not have placed himself under the stone, and was furnished with the tag rope to enable him so to work as not to expose himself to injury if a stone should fall.
Exceptions overruled.