163 Mass. 189 | Mass. | 1895
There was evidence from which the jury might find that the plaintiff, while in the discharge of duty and using due care, was injured by the breaking of a weak, knotty, worm-eaten, and rotten stake, which was unfit for the use to which it had been put, of holding a load of railroad ties upon a platform car; and from the description of the stake it would be competent for a jury to find that the putting of such a stake to such a use was an act of negligence. The use of the stake as a means of facilitating the passage of a brakeman from car to car of the train made it the duty of the defendant to use due care to see that it was suitable for that purpose.
These decisions do not show that the doctrine, that intrusting to suitable servants the duty of furnishing suitable appliances for the work does not discharge an employer from the consequences of negligence on the part of such servants in providing safe and suitable appliances, is not the law of Hew Hampshire. That question was not raised or decided in the decisions which were in evidence, and we must assume that the law of Hew Hampshire upon the question is the same as our own.
The case is not one where an implement designed for repeated use has been weakened and made unfit for further service by such use; it is rather the case of the furnishing of an implement never fit for use, and evidently unfit. Such a stake could not, without negligence, have been placed where stakes were
The defendant’s evidence falls short of showing that there was a sufficient supply of sound and suitable stakes. It shows only that the defendant supplied lumber enough to be sawed, and good lumber enough for the purpose, and men enough to prepare the stakes. That this stake was among those so prepared would justify a finding that it was there through the negligence of the men whose duty it was to prepare them, and for that negligence at least the defendant was answerable.
Exceptions sustained.
The plaintiff testified that he was ordered by the conductor to go forward to set off certain cars as they were approaching a junction; that in