39 A. 328 | R.I. | 1898
We think the demurrer should be sustained. The plaintiff, while assisting in the moving of a large telephone pole, was injured by reason of the falling thereof upon his body. The declaration shows that the superintendent in charge of the work had directed the plaintiff and several other fellow-servants of his to raise the top end of the pole, in order that a carriage on two wheels, called a "dinkey," could be placed under said pole for the purpose of moving it to the hole where it was to be erected. After the pole had been raised said "dinkey" was wheeled under the same, by direction of the superintendent, but before it had reached the *387
place where it was intended it should receive said pole — that is, before it came in contact with the pole so as to support the same — the superintendent gave the order to "let go," whereupon the plaintiff, supposing that the "dinkey" was so placed as to instantly receive the weight of said pole, he not being in a position where he could see the "dinkey," obeyed the order, and, by reason of the fact that the pole was some distance above the "dinkey" when said order was given, it fell, striking the plaintiff and seriously injuring him. In support of the declaration it is contended that the act of the superintendent, in ordering the plaintiff and his fellow-servants to let go their hold on the pole, was in law the act of the defendant corporation and, being a negligent act, gives the plaintiff a right of action. This contention is not tenable. In directing the plaintiff and his fellow-servants to let go their hold on the pole the superintendent was not performing, on behalf of the defendant corporation, any duty imposed by law upon it, that is, it was not an act which legally devolved upon the defendant to perform. The order to let go might as well have been given by any other employee as by the superintendent. It was a mere incident in connection with the raising of the pole. And as it is the character of the act, and not the rank of the person performing it, which is the test by which to determine whether in the performance thereof the person acting is the representative of the master (Hanna v. Granger,
The recent case of Donnelly v. Bridge Co.,
We think that it is clear, both from our own decisions and from the weight of authority generally, that the declaration does not state any cause of action.
Demurrer sustained, and case remitted to the Common Pleas Division with direction to enter judgment for the defendant for costs.