1 Colo. App. 404 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1892
Silverman was hurt in a quarry operated by tbe firm of Lantry & Sons, and brought this suit against them to recover damages'for his injuries. The facts are simple and the law applicable to them tolerably plain. In January, 1890, Silverman obtained employment by the firm through an employment agency in Denver. Lantry & Sons were then engaged in constructing a portion of the railroad up Pike’s Peak, and Silverman went there under his engagement. He was a blacksmith by trade, and apparently hired out as such, and was set to work in the shop sharpening tools used in the construction of the grade. He seemed to have some difficulty in adapting himself to that particular sort of labor, and was relieved from the job and sent up the canon to a quarry which the firm was operating, with a note to Turnbull who had charge of the work. He reported to Turnbull and was set to work as a blacksmith, but the bulk of his time was spent in the quarry, doing whatever he might be directed. This fact is unimportant except in view of one or two instructions given by the court. While he was laboring in the quarry with Turnbull and Maher, a co-employee, attempting to dislodge a large slab from its bed and tumble it to the place of its delivery, where it could be properly handled, he was directed by Turnbull to go a short distance down the ledge and remove some tools on which the slab was liable to fall. He obeyed the order and started back. There is some controversy as to what Silver-man did while executing the order. He contended that he threw the tools away and started directly up, going but a short distance from where they were, while the defense contend that he went twenty or thirty feet from the spot where the tools were, and was in a place of safety when he started back and put himself in a position of danger. In the view which the court takes of the case and the law governing it, this difference is of slight importance. Turnbull was in charge
The case was submitted to the jury, who found a verdict for the plaintiff. The errors insisted upon, present in some of their phases, the law governing the liability of the master for injuries to,the servant, when they are received in the •course of his. employment. It would serve no useful purpose to quote the instructions or to present an abstract of them. On .one branch of the inquiry it is enough to say that the witnesses were not agreed as to the terms of the original hiring, or as to the circumstances under which Silverman’s work wa's changed from that of a blacksmith to that of an ordinary laborer in the quarry. 'Whether the work in a quarry was more hazardous or dangerous than that of a smith was not very apparent. Still there was enough in the case to justify an instruction on the subject, and the rule which the court laid down was an accurate and lucid expression of the law, which could not have worked injury to the appellants. Erro.r may not be predicated upon it.
On the main inquiry, whether Silverman is debarred recovery, because the injury was occasioned by reason of his own carelessness,-the case is not free from difficulty. This difficulty scarcely extends to the question of the responsibility of a master for the negligence of a co-servant, since Turn-bull occupied-no such position. Under the circumstances and the rule enunciated by the Supreme Court in Denver S. P. & P. R. R. Co. v. Driscoll, 12 Colo. 520, the master is liable for the injury to the servant, if Turnbull’s negligence was its proxiinate cause. He was clearly a vice-principal. He was in full control and management of the operations of the quarry at the time Silverman got hurt. The servant
Perceiving no error in the record warranting a reversal, the judgment will be affirmed.
Affirmed.