87 S.W. 248 | Tex. | 1905
The judgment under review was recovered by defendant in error, as plaintiff, against plaintiff in error, as defendant, for damages for an injury sustained by plaintiff while in defendant's service. One of the leading questions submitted is whether or not the evidence showed any right of plaintiff to recover. There is practically no conflict in the testimony. The plaintiff was hurt while operating an elevator in defendant's furniture establishment, by having his arm caught between an iron bar across the side of the elevator and a block of wood fastened inside the shaft. The negligence is claimed to have consisted in having the block in such a position, or in allowing it to project so near the side of the elevator. The building was several stories high, and the block was fastened to a joist just under the second floor, where the elevator shaft passed through, and was about twenty-two inches long, two inches thick and projected from the joist four inches and to within about two inches of the body of the elevator. The elevator was open on that side, having only an iron bar as a guard across it. The cables by which it was controlled were outside of and between it and the side of the shaft, and one of them, to hold it steadily in position, passed through the hole in the center of the block. Plaintiff was returning with the elevator from the top of the building, and, in order to regulate its movement, extended his hand outside and caught hold of this cable, when his elbow came in contact with the block and was caught by the descending cross bar and injured. The evidence leaves no doubt that the block, thus projecting so near to the elevator, was a clumsy contrivance for the purpose for which it was intended, and the use of it was negligence, even if there was a necessity for anything to hold the cable at that point. Nothing of the kind was at the other floors or upon the other cable. The chief contention is that plaintiff knew, or ought to have known, of its presence and of the danger it caused, and therefore assumed the risk of, and was guilty of negligence in exposing himself as he did. That he did not know of the fact the evidence is direct, and this court could only sustain the contention by holding, as matter of law, that the facts admit of no rational opinion but that he ought to have known it. The evidence shows, and plaintiff admits, that the *14 block could have been seen by him from the elevator at any time when it passed that place, going up or down, had he looked for it, and that he had passed up and down many times each day for years; but it also shows that neither he, nor defendant, nor another employe, all of whom had used the elevator in the same way and for a long time, had ever seen it before this accident. There is only one witness who had seen it while using the elevator and he was a workman, skilled in the construction, repair and management of elevators. It seems that much handling of the cable was not necessary in running the elevator, the hand being upon it only when it was desired to start, accelerate or stop it, and that in order to reach the cable it was necessary to extend the arm outside the carriage. The danger from the block therefore existed only when the hand and arm happened to be extended as the elevator was passing it. The construction, also, was such that the operator would, as defendant himself testifies, naturally stand with his face towards the east side and not towards the cable and block, which were on the north side. It is conceded that it was no part of plaintiff's duty to inspect or see to the condition of the elevator and its attachments.
The views of the court upon these facts may best be given in discussion of the following special charge for the refusal of which the writ of error was granted: "You are further charged that if you believe from the evidence that the block described in plaintiff's petition was open and obvious to the plaintiff and that plaintiff had had opportunities to see said block, then you will return a verdict for defendant."
In such instructions it is necessary always to avoid putting upon the servant the duty which the law places upon the master. As the latter furnishes the place at, and tools and appliances with which his work is to be done, it is his duty to use the care defined by the law to have them in proper condition for use by the servant; and all such examinations and inspections as are essential to constitute such care are to be made by the master. This duty, with some exceptions not in question here, the servant need not concern himself with, but he may enter upon his work with the assumption that it has been properly performed by the master. He is not exempted from the use of care for his safety, but the care he is to employ is in the doing of his work and not in doing that which the law exacts of the master. Therefore the mere fact that he might by an investigation discover a defective condition which the master has negligently created or allowed to exist does not affect him. As he is to exercise, while engaged in his work, that care which persons of ordinary prudence exercise, to the same end, when similarly engaged, he must see and know those things and take those precautions which such persons ordinarily see, know and take. Of such things he is charged with knowledge whether he negligently fails to observe them or not. Of course we are not now speaking of inexperienced persons. It is thus that he may be charged with knowledge of a defect and a danger arising from negligence of the master, not because he is under obligation to make inquiry or examination as to the master's performance of duty, but because the thing is such that with common prudence he ought to see or know it in doing *15
his own work. A special application of this is that he must see those things which are open and obvious to him, which, in more general language, ordinarily cautious persons, engaged as he is, would see and understand. These principles have often been stated by this court; but in the trial of cases it not infrequently happens that instructions are so worded as to run the risk of misleading juries, on the one hand, into imposing upon the servant the duty of the master, or on the other, into exempting the servant, in doing his work, from the observance of that care which every man is expected to use in looking out for his safety. In Missouri, K. T. Ry. Co. v. Hannig (
If the special charge had adequately expressed this idea, and been free from another objection, the defendant would have been entitled to have it given. But its wording was calculated, without further explanation, to produce the impression that opportunities to see the block would charge plaintiff with knowledge of its presence, when, under the evidence, the opportunity may have consisted only in the ability to have discovered it by assuming the master's duty and in examining the construction of the elevator, and not in the fact that plaintiff could and ought to have seen it in the proper performance of his own duty. Upon the same distinction, we must hold that the evidence does not make so clear a case either of assumption of risk or contributory negligence, that this court can interfere with the verdict. From the evidence the jury might properly have concluded that plaintiff properly performed his own duty, did all that prudence required of him, and that he failed to learn of the presence of the block only because he did not make an examination which it was not his, but the defendant's duty to make.
The requested charge is also wrong in making knowledge, actually acquired, or to be imputed, of the presence of the block, without an *16 appreciation of the danger caused by it, to operate as a bar to recovery. It often happens that knowledge of a defective condition necessarily carries with it knowledge of the danger, and we were at first impressed with the view that this was such a case; but, as indicated by the facts stated, the danger to be apprehended from the block depended upon its proximity to the side of the elevator, and plaintiff might have known that a block was there without necessarily knowing that its position was such as to endanger him, and the charge should have left the question to the jury.
Another proposition contended for, upon the facts, is that the danger was as open to discovery by plaintiff as by defendant and that this precluded a recovery, but that this is not necessarily true is evident, when the differing duties of the two are kept in mind. The defendant's duty was to originally construct in the proper manner, and afterwards to examine, while that of plaintiff was only to do his work prudently. Either could have made the discovery by inspection, but this, it was defendant's, and not plaintiff's, duty to make.
Affirmed.