113 Wash. 132 | Wash. | 1920
This action was brought to recover for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff while in the service of the defendant. The case was tried to the court and a jury. At the close of the plaintiff’s testimony, the trial court, upon motion of the defendant, dismissed the action. The plaintiff has appealed.
The facts shown upon the trial are, in substance, as follows: The appellant had been employed about the
The negligence alleged in the complaint was: First, that respondent, through his foreman, directed appellant to quit his regular work and assist several laborers to carry heavy channel irons. Second, appellant was inexperienced in carrying heavy channel irons, which weighed from six hundred to twelve hundred pounds, and that respondent knew of appellant’s inexperience and gave appellant no instructions thereon.
After the appellant’s proof was made, the trial court was of the opinion that there was no evidence that the respondent was negligent, and that the appellant’s injuries were due to risks which he voluntarily assumed. We are satisfied that the trial court was right in his conclusion. If it may be conceded that the shops were being conducted short-handed, that fact had nothing to do with the removal of the channel irons, except that the appellant was for that reason directed to assist five other workmen to carry the irons from the shops to the pile driver. These six men were amply able to do the work and had, upon a previous occasion, removed the irons from the pile driver to the shop. The men used their own methods and judgment in the work. .There is no evidence that the respondent foreman refused them any appliances or directed how the work should be done. Appellant relies upon the case of Forsman v. Seattle Elec. Co., 58 Wash. 666, 109 Pac. 121, and cases of that character, where the master directed the method of the work, and appellant argues
“These cases are readily distinguishable upon the facts. Where a party undertakes to raise a heavy body from the ground, he has notice of the weight before the danger period arrives. It is very different, however, where one undertakes to unload an object from a wagon or a car, and has no notice other than the appearance of the object, until the weight is upon him and the danger period at hand. In brief, in the one case he can desist when the danger becomes apparent, and in the other he cannot.”
The case at bar comes within that rule.
In Rosin v. Danaher Lumber Co., 63 Wash. 430, 115 Pac. 833, 40 L. R. A. (N. S.) 913, 2 N. C. C. A. 265, which was a case where a heavy door weighing twelve hundred pounds was directed to be lowered to a horizontal position by five workmen under the direction of a foreman, Judge Crow, speaking for the court in that case, said:
“The single fact of the happening of an accident, which would have been avoided had more servants been provided to safely perform the work, is not of itself sufficient to establish negligence of the master. It must also appear that he did not exercise ordinary or reasonable care and prudence in estimating the number actually provided as necessary for the particular work. The master is not an insurer of the number of servants required any more than he is of their competency. If he were, then to relieve him from any possible negligence in such cases as this, it would become his imperative duty to make a preliminary test, not only of the weight of objects about to be handled, but also of the physical strength and endurance of the*136 servants detailed to perforin the particular work. Such a requirement would he impracticable, and in many instances, impossible. . The law only demands an exercise of reasonable and ordinary care and prudence in selecting the number of men to perform the work. ’ ’
That rule is no doubt correct and controls this case. The evidence introduced by the appellant plainly shows that the same crew of men which moved the iron from the pile driver to the shop were directed to remove the irons back to the pile driver from the shop. The men used their own methods with the facilities at hand. They were amply able to carry the weight. It cannot reasonably be said that it was negligence of the foreman to direct the same men to do what they had safely done at another time. These same men, in fact, had performed a preliminary test and each of them knew what they were able to do and what was required of them. They made no complaint or objections to doing the work, either before or after they had undertaken it. No negligence of the respondent was shown, nor was any fact shown from which negligence might be inferred.
The judgment is therefore affirmed.
Holcomb, C. J., Mitchell, Main, and Tolman, JJ., concur.