114 Wis. 493 | Wis. | 1902
1-. The assignments of error to which substantially the whole of appellant’s brief and argument is devoted involved the contention that there was no evidence to support the several findings of the jury upon which liability of the defendant is predicated. The rules of law governing such a situation are familiar, and need hardly more than statement. The master owes it to his employee to make the place rvhere the latter is to work reasonably safe, so that injury is not reasonably to be expected by one of ordinary foresight and care. McMahon v. Ida M. Co. 95 Wis. 308, 10 N. W. 478 ; Mielke v. C. & N. W. R. Co. 103 Wis. 1, 79 N. W. 22. This duty is qualified by the further rule that the master is not to bo made liable, although there are defects, and although the place is not safe, if such defects and unsafety either were known to the employee, or were so apparent that they should have been known to him in the exercise of ordinary care and observation consistent with the situation presented. Larsson v. McClure, 95 Wis. 533, 70 N. W. 662; Dugal v. Chippewa Falls, 101 Wis. 533, 77 N. W. 878; Mielke v. C. & N. W. R. Co., supra. The appellant asserts that there was no evidence upon which the jury could have found that the place was unsafe, or that, if so, the defendant knew it or by reasonable diligence could have known it, or that the plaintiff was ignorant, or could, consistently with reasonable care, have been ignorant, of the true situation; and he further contends that if the place in question were unsafe in the respect found
We have examined the evidence with great care, and find that it is characterized by some measure of conflict and dispute as to the situation, and also by considerable measure of uncertainty in the application of the statements of witnesses to the situation and the structure under which the plaintiff was working. In the latter respect, of course, we must recognize the superior advantages of both jury and trial judge to understand what the witnesses meant. Clifford, v. M., St. P. & S. S. M. R. Co. 105 Wis. 618, 81 N. W. 143. There is, however, no doubt that plaintiff was expected to work under this network of timbers and tram tracks, and that any condition thereof which rendered their fall probable in the course of the performance of the service as it had been laid out would justify an expectation of injury to workmen of the class of the plaintiff. It appears that the fire occurring three weeks before had been effective to bum away posts and superstructure for a considerable distance, but had lost that measure of force and destructiveness just short of the post near which plaintiff was injured, which is called in the testimony, and will be spoken of hereafter as, the “southwest post.” It also •appears that the fire had nin to some extent over all the rest of the trestlework, but, generally speaking, not so as to seriously destroy timbers or impair the strength of the structure. There is evidence of two witnesses that as to this southwest post much more destruction had taken place than with reference to the others which were still standing. One witness says that he looked at the post after the timbers. fell, and found that the top had been burned off. Another testifies that the cap was already gone, but that the burning was not easily discoverable from the ground to the eastward of this post, both because it was more on the westerly side of the post, and
In this situation, we are unable to say that there is no evidence that the fastenings intended to retain this large timber on top of the upright had not been so destroyed and impaired by fire as to render them inadequate; nor are we able to say, as the counsel for appellant argues, that the defendant and the plaintiff stood upon an equality as to their opportunities for knowledge. Plaintiff had been placed upon the ground, working from the east westward. He had had no duty, nor suggestion of any reason, which should take him to the west-. ward of this alleged defective comer; and, as we have said, there is testimony that its defects were not apparent as he worked toward it on the ground. The shoveling away of coal at the bottom of the pile was the method adopted by the master for doing the work upon which plaintiff was employed. This rendered certain the precipitation of the coal from the top of the pile down the steeply inclined easterly face thereof from time to time, whether by reason of its own weight, or by reason of its being picked away, as was in progress at the time of the injury; and, of course, the contact of such falling lumps with the posts was not only a probability, but practically a certainty. The lump which fell at the time of the injury certainly cannot be said to have been of a size beyond reasonable expectation. It is described as about eighteen inches long by a foot wide and six or eight inches thick, and, while made' up of coal fastened together by ice, it was no larger tiran lumps 'of soft coal are often found. So that the
But it is argued that the further question whether such defect was the actual cause of the fall of the timber and the plaintiff’s injury is pure conjecture, into which the jury ought not to have been allowed to stray. We cannot think so. It is in evidence that the four upright posts constituting a section were-connected by diagonal braces near the top, which drew the tops toward each other, so that the top of the post in question was leaning towards the northeast, — held there by the strain of the transverse braces. It is found by the jury that the caps, which under ordinary circumstances had been relied on to hold the horizontal timber in place and prevent it from slipping off of the top of the post, had been destroyed to such degree as to render the situation unsafe; and there is evidence that the top of the post had been burned off to some extent. Now, if in this situation one of the events likely to occur in the course of the work as the master directed it to be done, namely, the collision of a, lump of coal with the post, was likely, in ordinary human experience, to cause this horizontal beam to slip off of the top of the post eastward, how can it be said that the jury, in view of the whole situation, and in the absence of evidence of any other cause, could not have concluded, as reasonable men, that that situation was the cause of the precipitation of the timber? We think they might. The timber could not fall without some cause. One is shown, sufficient within ordinary probabilities. The infer
2. Appellant complains of the instruction to the jury defining “proximate cause.” That instruction informed the jury that, in order to find proximate causation, they must be satisfied that the injury was the natural and probable consequence of the defect, and foreseeable by exercise of ordinary care. These are the essential elements', and, while more amplification of some of the terms used has been approved in some cases, the omission of such amplification is not error,— certainly when not formally requested. We find no* error in the instruction on this subject.
3. Appellant urges a group of assigned errors predicated
The appellant also complains that no question was submitted' as to whether the conditions and surroundings of the place of plaintiff’s work were changing as a result of the work in which he was engaged. The only defect upon which plaintiff was allowed to recover was the condition of the fastenings of timber to the southwest post, resulting from a fire occurring some three weeks before. There was no particle of evidence that that condition was in any respect caused or changed by reason of the work in which the plaintiff and his fellow-servants were engaged. It was a condition existing before their work commenced, and with reference to which their work was done, and obviously was intended to be done by the defendant. The fact that day by day, as they carried off coal, they progressed from under one timber to another, was not in any respect changing or creating the conditions of the place of work in the respect complained of and made the basis of liability. Had the business of this gang of men been the tearing down of a structure such as here described, it might be claimed that weakening of the portions of the structure still standing, resulting from previous work, was a condition which they them
Complaint is also made of the failure to' submit some other alleged issues, — such, for example, as whether the weight of ice'broke the structure down, and whether any warning or caution was given to the plaintiff. On neither of these, however, was there any conflict in the evidence to- warrant their submission to the jury; and, at best, the facts to be called out by them would have been evidentiary upon certain of the issues which were submitted and passed upon.
4. Exception was taken and error assigned upon the admission of evidence that a couple of sections of trestlework lying to the south of that where plaintiff was injured were taken down some two or three days before the accident occurred. Wherein the admission of such testimony could have been prejudicial to the appellant is not pointed out. The court carefully excluded any liability of the defendant for any weakening of the remaining structure which might have resulted therefrom because, not pleaded. The admission of such proof was entirely natural in the description of the situation, which could hardly be made intelligible otherwise; but, in, any event, the fact so proved was alleged in the complaint
The foregoing are all of the errors argued by appellant, •either in his brief or orally, though others are assigned. It cannot be the duty of this court, under such circumstances, to seek out the reasons for the assignment of others, or their applicability to the case. Butter v. State, 102 Wis. 364, 78 N. W. 590; Cornell v. State, 104 Wis. 527, 535, 80 N. W. 745. Among those which the appellant has deemed worthy of argument we find none which can justify us in reversing the judgment.
By the Gouri. — Judgment affirmed.