171 Mass. 150 | Mass. | 1898
The plaintiff’s contention is, that the fact that his fellow workman held with the tongs over a forge fire a stick of frozen dualin in order to thaw it would of itself justify the jury in finding that the fellow workman was an unsuitable person for the defendants to have in their employment, and that therefore his ease, which was an action at common law for personal injuries, should have been submitted to the jury.
But upon the evidence the fellow workman was employed only as a common laborer, and the work for which he was employed had nothing to do with the handling or the use of explosives. His ignorance of them did not tend to show that the defendants were negligent in employing him as a common laborer, nor in putting him to work as such with the plaintiff. While it was very reckless and careless to send an ignorant common laborer to thaw out dualin, this act was not an act of the defendants, nor of their superintendent, but of another fellow workman, who was working in the trench with the other workmen, and was merely acting as foreman in the absence of the superintendent. Both of these persons, the "foreman who gave the improper order, and the workman who executed it, were fellow servants with the plaintiff, and the defendants are not answerable in this common law action for the negligence of either.
The plaintiff’s whole contention is that the workman who attempted to thaw the dualin over the fire was shown to be an unsuitable servant by that act, and in our opinion that is not enough to show that the defendants negligently employed him as a common laborer. Sending him to thaw the dualin was not the act of the defendants, but of another fellow workman, who it is not contended was negligently employed.
Exceptions overruled.