194 Mass. 412 | Mass. | 1907
The plaintiff was employed by the defendant at one o’clock in the afternoon on the eighteenth day of May, 1903, and between five and six o’clock of the same day she met with the accident here complained of.
She was set to work with other girls mending curtains, in a room some forty feet by thirty or thirty-five feet. Towards five o’clock she felt thirsty, and having seen two other' girls get a drink of water from a tank, or a pipe running into a tank, she went with two fellow employees to get a drink herself and fell into a hole between the tank and the floor. The tank was nine feet in height and five feet in diameter. It was (as we understand the bill of exceptions) the section of a cylinder set on end. The bottom of the tank was “ set into a space 3| to 4 feet ” below the floor in question. The top was therefore some five feet above the level of the floor. The hole in which this round tank was set was a square one, and there was a space of about eighteen inches between the corner of the square hole and the round side of the tank. The employees were in the habit of getting water to drink as it ran from the pipe into the tank, the water in the tank not being fit to drink. Mrs. Daley, who with Miss Conley was with the plaintiff (according to her testimony), first took a drink. Miss Conley asked the plaintiff if she wanted a drink; she said she did, and stepping to one side to make it convenient for Miss Conley she fell into the hole.
The plaintiff testified that she did not see the hole but was looking up and not on the floor. Although the evidence was overwhelming that the place in question was well lighted, there was some evidence that it was not. All the witnesses however testified that the hole would be seen by any one looking on the floor. On this evidence the presiding judge directed a verdict for the defendant. There were some questions of evidence which we shall state later on.
We are of opinion that the judge was right.
When the owner of real or personal property wishes to sell it.
Again, when an owner lets property to another in place of selling it, he is under no obligation to put it in repair or make it better, but can let it as it is.
The same principle applies when an employer hires a person to work in his factory. He is under no obligation to make the factory a better one or change it in any other way. The employee takes it as it is. Or, as it usually is said, he assumes all obvious risks. Whether the employee in fact does or does not know of the risk is not the question and is not material. He assumes all obvious risks, even though they be unusual ones, (McLeod v. New York, New Haven, & Hartford Railroad, 191 Mass. 389,) and it is for him to determine whether he will make an examination before going to work or will go to work without making an examination and take his chances. Rooney v. Sewall & Day Cordage Co. 161 Mass. 153, 159.
It is only in case the risk is not an obvious one that any duty is thrown on the employer, and the duty thrown on him in such a case is to give a warning.
On the uncontradicted testimony the hole in question in the case at bar would have been seen by any one who was looking on the floor. The case is very like Hoard v. Blackstone Manuf. Co. 177 Mass. 69; Nealand v. Lynn & Boston Railroad, 173 Mass. 42; Kleinest v. Kunhardt, 160 Mass. 230.
The difference between the case at bar and the cases of Falardeau v. Hoar, 192 Mass. 263, and Hogarth v. Pocasset Manuf. Co. 167 Mass. 225, relied on by the plaintiff, is plain. It is one thing to open a trap door and leave it unguarded, and another to maintain a hole all the time which is obvious to any one who looks on the floor in which the hole is. In Gustafsen v. Washburn & Moen Manuf. Co. 153 Mass. 468, a ditch was dug subsequently so as to make it dangerous to use the track in question as it was used when the plaintiff entered the employment of the defendant.
The questions of evidence remain.
It was immaterial whether the hole had been covered over previously or not. The question to be tried was whether it was in the same condition at the time of the accident that it was in
The plaintiff was not injured by the refusal of the judge to allow the plaintiff to ask the superintendent whether the employees were in the habit of drinking at the tank in question. That was proved afterwards, and we have assumed it to be the fact in dealing with the plaintiff’s case.
So far as defects in the ways, works and machinery are concerned, there is no difference between the liability under the employers’ liability act (R. L. c. 106, § 71, cl. 1) and at common law, except in the amount which can be recovered. Lynch v. Stevens & Sons Co. 187 Mass. 397. For this reason the plaintiff was not harmed by the exclusion of her notice, if it was a good one.
Exceptions overruled.
Bailey was the foreman of the defendant’s cleansing house in which the plaintiff was employed, and was called by the plaintiff as a witness. The question excluded was whether before May 18, 1903, the opening was covered in any way.