18 Colo. App. 223 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1902
Defendant had judgment on the pleadings. Plaintiff is here on error. The pleadings consisted of complaint, answer and replication. The complaint alleged that defendant as owner was operating a mine and mill, distant from each other about one mile and a half, and connected by a tramway conveying the ore from the mine to the mill where it was fed into the crusher; that the operation of the mine and the mill was one enterprise, and under one general manager with power to determine the number of men employed, to employ and discharge them; that plaintiff, a millwright, was superintendent of the mill with duty to operate it; that on several occasions prior to the date of the accident involved, through the negligence of defendant, miners’ tools and other like articles were mingled with the ore at the mine, conveyed to the mill, and to the peril of the mill and all the employees engaged therein, including plaintiff fed into the crusher; that plaintiff on several occasions reported to defendant through its general manager the fact that said implements, and other dangerous articles, were being carried into the
It appears from one of the grounds of defense, and is not denied by the replication, that such mill is used only for crushing of ore taken from defendant’s mine; that the mine and mill constitute one enterprise under one general manager, and that all employees working in said enterprise are under employment of, and their wages paid by, defendant.
Plaintiff contends that the alleged negligence in permitting the hammer to get into the ore at the mine, and in permitting it to be carried by the tramway to the mill, was that of defendant, and was the prosimate cause of plaintiff’s injuries.
Defendant contends that such alleged negligence was that of a fellow servant. Further, that such negligence was not the prosimate cause of the accident.
If the alleged negligence was that of a fellow servant it is decisive of the case.
“As between master and servant, the duty of planning a business, and all duties pertaining to the safety of .the service — such as the place to work, the implements and machinery, the plans and rules after which the work is to be conducted, the choosing of the fellow servants, and whatever else is within the same reason — must be discharged either by the master in person, or by a vice-principal for whose neglects and other wrongs therein he will be responsible as for his own. On the other side, the running of the business, with and in pursuance of the plans, rules, appliances, helps and helpers thus provided— in other words, the execution of the work — is of the assignable sort, rendering all persons engaged therein fellow servants, so that, if the master used due care in selecting his servants, he will not be responsible to one for an injury produced by the negligence or other default of another.” — Bishop on Non-Contract Law, § 665.
It is not complained that defendant was negligent in providing machinery or other implements with which to. carry on the enterprise of mining and milling, nor is it charged that defendant failed to exercise the requisite care in the selection or retention of its employees. The charge is, that it was negligent in permitting in the course of the operation of
“The specific act in connection with which the negligence occurs is the criterion by which the liability of the company is fixed, rather than the rank of the servant who performs the act.” — D. & R. G. R. R. Co. v. Sipes, supra.
If we assume, therefore, that the alleged negligence in permitting the presence of the hammer in the ore and its conveyance and feeding to the crusher was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries — a point we do not decide — such negligence was that of a fellow servant for which defendant was not liable. —D. & R. G. R. R. Co. v. Sipes, supra, and authorities cited.
We think the trial court was right in entering-judgment upon the pleadings. Its judgment will be affirmed. Affirmed.
Thomson, J., dissenting.