197 P. 743 | Mont. | 1921
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff recovered a judgment against the defendant in the court below for injuries received by his intestate, while engaged in the work of cleaning up and removing snow from about the station and platform of the defendant in the city of Missoula. The appliance used consisted of a box set upon runners into which the snow, gathered by the crew of which the deceased was a member, was deposited p,nd carried away. In the progress of the work, when it became necessary to move the box, one or more of the crew would pull upon a rope fastened to the runners, other members thereof assisting by • pushing at the rear. The complaint alleges that the appliance was unfit for the use to which it was put, because it was equipped vpth runners when wheels should have been provided instead; that if it had been fitted with wheels, "the momentum and movement of said box and contents might and would have been under reasonable control, and the amount of force necessary to start and move the same be ascertainable and known to the employees and deceased,
Did the plaintiff show, by preponderating proof, that
The testimony of Peter George is as follows: “I pushed the box just as I did always, yes; I just give him a push to move the box. No, sure I didn’t want him to fall and get hurt. All I pushed it for was simply to move the box on the sled from where it was to some other place. I certainly moved it just as I had before. I was working there. I don’t know whether John saw me at the time I pushed the box. All of the rest were shoveling snow in the box. As to whether I was the only one who helped him, I don’t know if they did,
Christ Peykoff, testifying for defendant, describes the occurrence as follows: “I remember the occasion of John Kontsontonis falling on the platform. I seen him. At the time he fell he was just pulling the box. I did not see anyone else helping him to move it, there was just a few shovels full of snow in the box. It was light. I saw him at the time he fell. As to what he did immediately after he fell, he just fell down and got up and he started to work again. He didn’t say anything.”
The determinative questions are: Would the accident have happened if the appliance had been equipped with wheels instead of runners? Were the injuries due to defendant’s negligence in exposing the injured employee to danger from improper appliances ? Or were they due to a fall induced by the inattention and indifference of the deceased to his own safety? These questions are not answered in plaintiff’s favor unless the proof shows affirmatively that the fall would not have occurred but for the alleged negligence on the part of the defendant. The law is not satisfied by proof that the box could have been more readily handled, or more safely operated if it had been equipped with wheels instead of runners. The plaintiff must not only go on and show the causal connection between the fall and the ineptitude of the appliances, but also that the latter played the controlling part in producing the injuries exclusive of any other. Common experience in the use of runners is enough to show their, suitability for moving vehicles over snow and ice, if not to offset the claim of negligence in their use at the particular time, place and situation stated. The fact, too, that deceased did slip and:
In the selection of tools and appliances, discretion is
The next ground of negligence alleged is that the push
The allegation of failure on the part of the defendant
If it can reasonably be found that the deceased was
Sinee it is apparent that plaintiff has produced all the evidence available on the subject, the judgment and order appealed from are reversed, with directions to dismiss the complaint.
Reversed.