56 Wash. 690 | Wash. | 1910
This is an appeal from a judgment for personal injuries. The appellants own a lumber mill, and employed the respondent to operate the rigging used for hauling the logs from the mill pond up to the log deck, preparatory to cutting them into lumber. The logs were hauled up a tramway or chute, which extended from the log deck down into the water of the mill pond, by means of a steel cable attached to a drum; the latter being a contrivance in the shape of a large spool fastened between frames placed
The day before the accident happened by which the respondent was injured, the cable pulled loose from its fastening on the drum and was fixed by the appellant Peter Chappell. In fixing it, some of the strands of wire of which the cable was composed were broken and the ends were left sticking out. The respondent called the attention of Chappell to these ends, telling him that he did not feel like working around the cable in its then condition, and was told by Chappell that he had then no time to fix it, but would cut off the objectionable part just as soon as he could get around to it. On the next day the respondent attached the cable to a log and proceeded to start the hauling machinery in motion. He first put on the friction gear and then stepped over to close the clutch. The lever to the clutch was laid parallel with the mill floor and some few inches above it, and the clutch was thrown on and off by moving the lever horizontally. After stooping and moving the lever putting the clutch in place, he started to rise, when his feet slipped on some wet bark which had dropped from the logs to the mill floor, and in his endeavor to protect himself from falling, he threw out his hand, striking the cable at a place where the end of a broken wire protruded. The end of the wire pierced his glove and held him fast to the cable, so that he was hauled to the drum and wound around it under the cable. He was carried four times around the drum, breaking one arm and both legs, one of them in two places. For these injuries he sued in this action.
The next assignment is the contention that the proximate cause of the injury to the respondent was the wet and slippery refuse on the mill floor, and not the stranded condition of the cable, and it is argued that since the respondent assumed the risk of injury from the slippery refuse he cannot recover for any injury to which it contributed in any degree. But this contention mistakes the rule. The slippery condition of the debris on the floor did not cause the respondent’s injury. While it caused him to fall, the fall itself caused him no injury. His injury was due to the stranded condition of the wire cable. It was this that brought him within range of the drum where he was injured. Hence the condition of the cable was the proximate cause of the injury, and not the condition of the accumulated refuse upon the floor. The case of Hunter v. Washington Pipe etc. Co., 43 Wash. 167, 86 Pac. 171, does not support the appellants’ contention in this regard. The employee seeking to recover in that case was not injured while in the performance of his duty. He voluntarily went into a place of obvious danger when his incidental duties did not call him there, and it was for that reason it was held that the master was not liable, notwithstanding the master had neglected the statutory duty of placing guards over the cogwheels on which he was injured. Here the respondent was injured while in the direct perfoi’mance of his duty, on an instrumentality the dangers of which he had directly refused to assume, and which the master had expressly assumed for him. The distinction is obvious.
The remaining assignments relate to the instructions to the jury. But, without examining each objection separately, it is sufficient to say that the instructions were fair as a whole, and could not mislead the jui-y to the appellants’ prejudice.
The judgment is affirmed.
Rudkin, C. J., Chadwick, and Gose, JJ., concur.