61 N.J.L. 671 | N.J. | 1898
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The question raised under this writ is as to the legality of the action of the trial judge at the Union Circuit in granting a nonsuit at the close of the plaintiff’s case.
The plaintiff in error brought suit in that court against the defendant in error to recover damages for injuries sustained
The accident appears to have occurred by the giving way of a cross-piece nailed to two upright poles, that bore one end-of the planks, used for the scaffold, because of negligent construction. The scaffolding extended all around the boat and was built in the manner indicated. The plaintiff, with several others, was on this part of the scaffold, engaged in moving the planks around from one side of the boat to the other, when it gave way under the strain and plaintiff fell. The defendant insisted, as a ground for nonsuit, that the accident was caused by the negligence of a fellow-servant, for which the defendant, as the common master, could not be held.
The proofs offered by plaintiff tended to show that the plaintiff was a shipcarpenter, and as such was employed, at tne time of his fall, with other servants of the defendant— shipcarpenters, platers and riveters—in the work of construction ; that the defendant had not undertaken to furnish the scaffold or supervise its construction, but that the erection of the scaffold and the adjusting of it to the needs of the work by elevating it or lowering the planking as the work progressed was a part of the service exacted of the carpenters by the defendant, and which they were accustomed to perform in the regular line of their duty; that there was a foreman in charge of the work at the time, who was also a shipcarpenter engaged with the others in the common employment, and that these facts were known to the plaintiff at the time of the accident.
There was no proof that the defendant had furnished improper materials or that he had been in any way negligent in the selection of the shipcarpenters or others so employed.
The natural sequence from these facts, with the law applied, would seem to be that a case had arisen which was within the exception to the general rule of the master’s liability for the negligence of his servant, and that the doctrine
Eor further recognition of this doctrine see 1 Shearm. & R. Neg. (5th ed.) 234; Beach Con. Neg. 98; 7 Am. & Eng. Encycl. L. 821; Whart. Neg. 224.
Nor is the operation of this rule modified or interfered with on the ground that the work upon the' boat was being done under the direction of a foreman acting as a vice principal.
The general doctrine that the master is to be held liable for injury to his servants through the negligence of an agent or middleman, under whose absolute control he places them, has no application to this case. There was, indeed, a foreman, but the evidence is that, as a shipcarpenter, he was engaged in the common employment with the other servants. When this is so, then the foreman is not a vice principal, but a fellow-servant with the others, and for his negligent acts the master is not responsible. O’Brien v. Dredging Co., 24 Vroom 291; Steamship Co. v. Ingebregsten, 28 Id. 400; Maher v. Thropp, 30 Id. 186; McLaughlin v. Camden Iron Works, 31 Vroom 557; Northern Pacific Railroad Co. v. Peterson, 162 U. S. 346 ; 16 Sup. Ct. 843.
But the plaintiff in error does not, as I understand it, deny the doctrines here stated nor their general application to the facts of the pending case. He insists, however, that under the evidence it appears that the negligent construction which caused the injury took place before the plaintiff entered into his contract of employment with defendant, and that he cannot
So far as the scaffold poles are concerned, they may have been erected before the plaintiff’s service began, for it appears that they are not so often replaced as are the cross-pieces for the planks to rest on. .
But the plaintiff’s service had continued for two and one-half months, with the exception of a short interval while he was laid off, and he had been continuously at work on the boat for two weeks preceding the accident. It also clearly appears that the fall was not due to any fault of the poles, but was caused through the negligent nailing of one of the cross-pieces.
With regard to this part of the work, the plaintiff testified that in all his long service in this and other shipyards, both in this country and in Europe, it had been the custom and duty of the shipcarpeuters employed in them to erect scaffold poles and shift up and down the cross-pieces, so as to make the scaffold higher or lower as the work on the boats required ; that he had seen the shipcarpenters around this boat shift the scaffold a great many times, and had himself assisted in this work on two occasions, and that such work was the general work of the shipcarpenter.
Just when this negligent construction occurred, whether during plaintiff’s immediate service or before that time, is not material so far as the question of defendant’s own responsibility is concerned, if plaintiff knew or ought to have known that the scaffold which fell had been erected not by or under the supervision of the master, but as part of the work of those who, as fellow-servants, were engaged in the common employment of the defendant in his shipyard.
That this was the fact admits of no question, and that plaintiff knew this fact or should have known it when he renewed his service, is equally clear.
The principle underlying this exemption of the master from responsibility from negligent injuries of a fellow-servant, arises from the fact that one who enters into such a service assumes
This was such a risk as plaintiff must have known he was assuming when he again renewed his relation as a servant with the defendant, and hence the reasonableness of the application of the rule to the plaintiff, though his service may not have been concurrent with the negligence complained of.
The result thus reached will be found, I think, in harmony with the decisions.
The case of Arkerson v. Dennison, 117 Mass. 407, has been cited by counsel of the plaintiff as one directly in point and as supporting the view thus advanced by him. While that case arose out of an injury to plaintiff, caused by a fall from staging on which he was at work repairing a building, and it appears that the staging was built before the plaintiff began work, by persons who were afterwards his fellow-workmen, the decision does not seem to support the contention of the plaintiff in error.’
The court held that the judge erred in directing a verdict for the defendant, but the opinion nowhere bases its ruling •on the fact that the staging was built before the plaintiff •began work.
On the contrary, the error pointed out is that the judge had excluded evidence tending to show that the defendant had retained the charge and direction of the building of the staging himself, and had thereby taken from the jury the •question of negligent supervision on the part of the defendant, which should have been submitted to them. This case, in fact, tells against, rather than in favor, of the point it was cited to sustain.
While there are many cases -in which the doctrine of negligence of fellow-servant ■ has been applied, although the neglect had occurred prior to the employment of the party injured, as in Killea v. Faxon, 125 Mass. 485, this exact point has been seldom raised in the discussions.
In that case a longshoreman was injured while loading a vessel, from the defective building of a “ stool ” formed by the laying of plank in the square of the hatch, above the hold of the vessel, and the piling of bags of flour thereon, on which the workmen stood to receive the flour lowered to them in slings, and then delivered by them to others, who stowed it away. It was customary for the longshoremen to extend the planks upon which the “ stool ” was constructed to some distance outside of it, but that precaution had been omitted, and the deceased was struck by one of the descending loads and killed by falling into the hold. It was held that the master, having furnished proper planks and bags of flour for the purpose, it became the duty of the servants, as part of their work, to erect the “ stool,” and not the duty of the master. It seems to • have been insisted, among other contentions, that the deceased having commenced his labor after the “stool” had been built, and without knowledge of the omitted plank and the consequent probability of danger, the right of action for causing his death could not be defeated by the negligence of fellow-servants.
Upon this point the opinion holds that the establishment of these facts would simply tend to free the deceased from the charge of contributory negligence, but would not alter the relation of the master to the servants and their'work; that the neglect was a continuing one; that it became such as to Hogan when he began his work, and that the duty to close the opening by laying additional plank was that of the servant and not of the master.
This statement of the law is practically in accord with the rule as I have endeavored to define it.
The result is that, in my judgment, the plaintiff was properly nonsuited, and I will therefore vote to affirm.
For reversal—Lippincott, Ludlow. 2.