194 Mass. 428 | Mass. | 1907
This is an action of tort to recover for injuries received by the plaintiff’s intestate, one Woods, while employed
We think that a verdict should have been ordered for the defendant. The use of the rope to get out the stone with was not negligence on the part of the foreman. On the contrary the experts called by the plaintiff testified that it was proper, one of them going so far as to say that he had used the method of fastening which the testimony showed that Woods used. Woods was not directed to assist in lifting or raising the stone, but, assuming, as would naturally be the case, that he was expected to do so, the general danger was as apparent to him as to the-foreman and therefore he needed no warning or instruction. He fastened on the rope himself and from his experience in the quarry
Assuming that the remark made by the man on the bank that the rope was not going to hold and the reply of the foreman
_Exceptions sustained.
It appeared that the plaintiff previously had been employed for ten years in the work of quarrying stone, his work being to strike the drill and to blast, and that where he was working stones were loaded by fastening chains around them and hoisting them on the wagons with derricks.
The reply of the foreman was “ You never mind the rope. You pull up . the stone.”