155 Minn. 385 | Minn. | 1923
Action by the plaintiff to recover for injuries sustained through the discharge of a shotgun while he was working on the tracks of the Great Northern Railway Company. There was a verdict for the plaintiff for $5,000. The court granted defendant’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. The plaintiff appeals.
The plaintiff ivas a section hand working with a crew on the Great Northern tracks near Mason, North Dakota. As the crew was returning from work on the evening of October 14, 1919, the gun was discharged and the plaintiff was injured.
The men lived at the section house, bought their provisions, and boarded themselves, each in turn doing the cooking. One of the men owned a shotgun. It was carried on the car to and from work when occasion suggested. The car was the ordinary pushcar equipped by the foreman with a motor to save work in propelling. The foremen were permitted to equip the cars in this way. The motor was a second-hand one, apparently defective and not in good condition, and the car shook as it was about to stop. The gun was used by members of the crew in hunting during the rest hour, or on
The plaintiff worked on the section for several months while the gun was in use. He came to this country in 1907 from Greece, his native country, returned there in 1912 and served in the Greek army, returning to this country in 1914. He was familiar with firearms. While at work on the section he procured a hunting license from the North Dakota authorities. His personal connection with the gun is not uncertain. The cause of its discharge is not directly shown. It may be inferred that the shaking of the car, as it slowed down, was the cause. The company had no use for the gun. It was not used in its business nor to forward its interests. It was used for the pleasure and incidental advantage of the men. The trial court succinctly stated the situation thus:
“The shotgun was not used or intended to be used by the foreman and the men in the furtherance of their master’s business while performing their duties for the railroad company. It was carried on the handcar for the shooting of game. The foreman and the men, including the plaintiff, boarded themselves and shared alike the cost of the provisions; and the game which was secured by means of this shotgun in question belonged to all the men, including the plaintiff, and supplied their common larder. The carrying of the gun for the purpose of securing game for their common table may be termed a joint enterprise in which the plaintiff shared equally with the foreman and the other men. The duties and work of the section men did not require them to carry a gun. The carrying of the gun was personal to the plaintiff and to the other men.”
There is no theory upon which the plaintiff can sustain a recovery. The use of the gun was without the scope of the employment of the men.
We do not mean that there are not situations where an employer is liable to his employes for allowing firearms to be about the place where they work, or to employes or third persons for injuries resulting from the negligent use of firearms in the hands of employes, or
Order affirmed.