91 Mich. 605 | Mich. | 1892
In September, 1885, Messrs. Michenfelder and Eatigan, who were then carrying on business ..as brewers, made a contract with one Jubilo to cut and haul their ice, and fill their ice-house. In December, 1885, and before the work had been commenced under said contract, Messrs. Michenfelder and Eatigan, with -others, organized the defendant company, and the business was afterwards carried on in the name of the Bavarian Brewing Company. Michenfelder was its president, and Eatigan its secretary. The ice was hoisted into the ice-house by means of a stationary hois'ing .-.apparatus, owned by the -company, and it was a part of Jubilóos work, under his contract, to hoist the ice by means of this apparatus, and pack it away in the ice-.house. This apparatus was operated by horse power. The cut on next page will aid in its explanation.
B and B represent the buckets. A wire cable extended from the top of one bucket to the top of the other, and .a manilla rope extended from the bottom of one bucket to the bottom of the other. The pulley at the left was ..attached by the rope “F” to a stake, so that while in operation
1. That the immediate cause of the accident was the negligence of a fellow-servant.
2. That plaintiff was negligent in getting into the well to clean it out.
There was a succession of doors upon the outside of' the ice-house, and, as it was filled up, the lower door was closed, and the next was opened. In order to carry the-•buckets higher, it became necessary to shorten the wire-cable between the buckets. This was done by means of a wrench or crank at the point R.” While plaintiff' claimed that a number of strands of the wire cable were-actually eaten off by the rust, and that the remaining-strands were weakened and rotten from the same cause,.- and that the cable would not have parted except for that reason, the defendant claimed that, while plaintiff was-engaged in cleaning out the well, two of Jubilo’s employés, who were plaintiff’s fellow-servants, were operating the crank at the point R,” and had not taken the precaution to lengthen or loosen the rope, and that, in.
The testimony was conflicting upon this point, but there was no error in the court’s instruction to the jury that—
“If the injury was caused by the attempt of the fellow-servant to shorten the wire rope without lengthening the manilla rope, then the plaintiff cannot recover.’’
The testimony tended to show that, unless the proper slack was given to the rope at"the point “F,” the man at the crank would exert a lifting power or strain upon the cable of 2,400 pounds. The cable had been in use, and had stood the strain of that use; and while it is true that it may have been giving way during that use, and that the shortening of the cable was the last straw, yet if plaintiff’s co-employés, without giving the necessary slack to the rope “F,” were, at the time of the accident, operating the crank or lever, and exerting the aforesaid strain upon the cable, that must be said to be the proximate cause of the accident, and plaintiff cannot recover. Defendant could not be held liable for injuries resulting from either the inexperience or negligence of Jubilo’s employés. Its duty was discharged when it furnished the hoisting apparatus in a reasonably safe condition. Jubilo undertook its operation, and defendant cannot be held responsible for injuries resulting from improper management.
Upon the second point the testimony was conflicting as to the necessity for getting into the well or box, in order to clean it out. The well was s'ome four feet square. The rope ran through its center. There was an opening upon one side from which it was claimed by defendant that it could be cleaned. It was cleaned with an ordinary shovel. Testimony was offered tending to
“If the plaintiff, without orders from any person, put himself in danger by getting into the box when he could have done the work of cleaning without getting in there, he cannot recover.”
In any event, under the testimony, the question was one of fact for the jury, and not one of law for the court.
Nor was the danger from the falling of the bucket caused by defective appliances one of the risks incident to plaintiffs employment. The risks incident to an employment, and which an employé assumes, are those which are inseparable from the employment, and which the exercise of ordinary care on the part of the employer in the selection, use, and operation of appliances cannot avoid. A danger which exists only because of defective appliances, of which an employé has no notice, cannot be said to be one of the risks which the employé assumes. The court erred, therefore, in instructing the jury that—
“The law presumes that every person who accepts •employment does so with the risks incident thereto.”
The repeated instruction to the jury that the relation of master and servant did not exist between defendant and plaintiff was misleading. It is not necessary that such relation exist in order to entitle plaintiff to recover. Johnson v. Spear, 76 Mich. 139.
The court further instructed the jury—
“That this Bavarian Brewing Company was made a*611 ■company on the 10th day of December, 1885, and unless you find that after the 10th day of December, 1885, and before plaintiff was hurt, that is, on the 15th day of January, the contract was entered into, wherein this •company was to furnish machinery by which the plaintiff's employer, Jubilo, was. to put up this ice, then your verdict will be for the defendant.”
The defendant company continued the business which had been carried on by Michenfelder & Co. Mr. Ratigan testified that the contracts made by the old firm were •carried out by defendant; that everything went on just the same; that the consideration for Jubilo’s work under this contract was paid by defendant; and that the cbligations of Michenfelder & Go. were assumed and paid by defendant. Under these circumstances, defendant stood in the shoes of Michenfelder & Co., and the ■instruction was erroneous.
The judgment is reversed, and a new trial ordered, ■with costs to plaintiff.