164 Mass. 560 | Mass. | 1895
The plaintiff fell and was injured by reason of the breaking of a plank in a temporary staging on which he was working in the defendant’s building. It is not disputed that the staging was of a kind the construction of which is ordinarily left to the servants of the builder, and that the duty of the master concerning it was performed if he furnished a sufficient supply of suitable materials from which to construct it. In this case there was uncontradicted evidence that there were plenty of planks furnished by the defendant from which to build the staging, and the negligence, if there was any, was on the part of the workmen who put the planks in place in taking one which was not adapted to such a use. Upon these facts, if the plaintiff had been in the defendant’s service at the time when the staging was built, it would be very clear that he could not maintain his claim. Kennedy v. Spring, 160 Mass. 203.
But it appears that,- although he had previously worked for a considerable time upon the building, he was away working for
Exceptions overruled.