137 P. 534 | Mont. | 1913
Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
The respondent, plaintiff below, brought this action to recover damages for injuries received by him as the result of a fall of some scenery at the appellant’s Broadway Theater, in Butte, on December 9, 1910. The complaint is in two so-called causes of action, the first charging a failure on the part of appellant, as plaintiff’s employer, to exercise reasonable care to furnish him with a reasonably safe place in which to work, and the second charging a failure on the part of appellant to use ordinary care to employ reasonably competent fellow-servants. The answer joins issue upon all the matters alleged in the complaint which form the basis of recovery, but contains no affirmative pleas. The cause was tried to a jury which returned a general verdict for the respondent, and judgment was entered thereon. Motion for new trial was made and denied. The cause is now before us upon appeal from the judgment and from the order
It is to be noted at the outset that although the complaint is in the form of two causes of action, but one actionable event is set forth, to-wit, a fall of the scenery resulting in plaintiff’s injuries. ■ The effect of the complaint, notwithstanding its form,
1. The appellant’s neglect to use reasonable care to furnish respondent with a reasonably safe place in which to work is
2. The failure to exercise reasonable care to furnish respondent with reasonably skillful and competent fellow-servants is alleged to have consisted in the following facts: That the appellant “carelessly and negligently employed one William Cary as a stage-hand to assist in setting up scenery and removing the same from said stage”; that he was incompetent because “at the time of his employment he was intoxicated,” and thereby rendered “incompetent and unfit to perform the services required of him”; that these facts were known to appellant, or in the exercise of ordinary care should have been known to it; that “by reason of his said incompetency and unfitness, as herein detailed,” said Cary performed his work so carelessly and unskillfully that a portion of the scenery was thrown upon the respondent. It is vigorously insisted by the appellant that the respondent has not sustained these allegations by the proof. The respondent’s narrative of the accident and the manner of its happening is substantially this: About a quarter past 9, while talking with the stage manager, Hi Leckie, their attention was called to Cary and one Petrucci, who were over at the pack of scenery on the west or back wall of the stage. Mr. Leckie saw Petrucci beckon, and turning to respondent said: “Go over there and see what they want.” Respondent went over, saw Petrucci and Cary holding the scenery pack and ascertained they were desiring to get out “a pair of curtains.” Respondent then turned around, started toward the stage manager to “tell him the condition of these men”; got about ten feet from the pack when it fell upon him. “Cary was then under the influence of liquor.” The witness Peiler testified that Petrucci and Cary were both handling the pack; that it fell on the respondent “because they did not have energy enough to hold it; there was no
3. Under “Argument III, Errors XXI and XXII,” complaint is made because the court gave instructions numbered 11 and 12, which, it is said, were “prejudicially erroneous in failing to take into consideration the assumption of risk, the negligence of a fellow-servant, and the proximate cause of the injury.” Errors XXI and XXII assign the giving of instructions C and H, and we do not find that the court gave any in-
Instruction C is further attacked because it advises the jury
4. It is ■ further urged that the verdict is contrary to law, as in defiance of instructions 5 and 6. These instructions were
No argument is presented in the brief to the effect that the giving of these instructions, or the giving of any instructions based upon the so-called first cause of action, was error, and in fact the particular instructions 5 and 6 were given at the request of appellant.
The other assignments of error argued in the brief are disposed of by what we have said above. We find nothing in the record to warrant a reversal. The judgment and order appealed from are therefore affirmed.
'Affirmed.
Rehearing
On Motion for Behearing.
(Submitted November 17, 1913. Decided January 2, 1914.)
delivered the opinion of the court.
The principal ground of the motion for rehearing is that, since the complaint alleged the failure of defendant to furnish competent fellow-servants consisted in the fact that Cary was intoxicated “at the time of his employment,” a recovery'was not permissible in the absence of evidence to show his intoxication at the time he was hired, notwithstanding the evidence that for over an hour prior to the accident, during which time' the stage manager was present, Cary was kept employed in a noticeably intoxicated condition. We thought, and still think, the variance too unsubstantial to justify a reversal. (Bev. Codes, sees. 6585, 6593.) To this it may be added that the elaborate motions for nonsuit addressed to the trial court do not
The motion for rehearing is denied.