134 F. 789 | 3rd Cir. | 1905
This case comes up upon writ of error to the Circuit Court for the district of New Jersey, to review a judgment entered therein against plaintiff in error, upon a verdict of a jury for $8,000 damages, besides costs. We will speak hereafter of the plaintiff in error as the defendant, and the defendant in error as the plaintiff.
The suit in the court below was an action in tort, founded upon the alleged negligence of defendant company, which resulted in injury to the plaintiff. The facts, as disclosed by the record, are that the plaintiff, at the time of the accident, in February, 1903, had been employed
There was no proof or testimony of any kind, tending to show that the defendant company had knowledge of, or was informed that, such special danger attended the process of slacking lime in the receptacle described, or in any other. Nobody connected with the works, including the plaintiff, testified that he knew of any such special danger, or that such an explosion in slacking lime had ever occurred before, in receptacles of that kind, or any other. Two of the witnesses employed in the works testified to slacking the lime in just such vessels. Three or four witnesses were produced in behalf of the plaintiff, who testified as experts, that the drum in question was not a safe vessel in which to slack lime, and two or more experts were produced on behalf of the defendant, who testified that they considered the drum in question a safe and fit receptacle for the slacking of lime. The court, refusing the peremptory instructions, asked for by defendant’s counsel, charged the jury generally, and submitted to them, the case. Defendant excepted to the refusal to instruct peremptorily in its favor, and to certain portions of the charge to the jury, and the verdict and judgment having been rendered in favor of the plaintiff, we have here to consider the assignments of error founded upon these exceptions.
The view we take of the assignment of error, directed to the refusal of the court to give peremptory instructions to the jury to find a verdict for the defendant, makes it unnecessary that we should consider the other assignments, founded upon exceptions to the admission of testimony and to certain portions of the charge delivered by the trial judge to the jury.
The Supreme Court has repeatedly approved the proposition, that in every case, before the evidence is left to the jury, there is a preliminary question for the judge, not literally, whether there is any evidence, but whether there is any upon which a jury can properly proceed to find a verdict for the party producing it, and upon whom the onus of proof is imposed. Pleasants v. Fant, 22 Wall. 116, 22 L,. Ed. 780; Marion County v. Clark, 94 U. S. 278, 24 L. Ed. 59.
A careful reading of the evidence sent up to us by the bill of exceptions, and consideration of the facts established thereby, and undisputed, convince us that this case should not have been submitted to the jury without peremptory instructions to find for the defendant. It is not denied that the plaintiff in this case, a man of mature years, was of fair intelligence, and had undertaken, in the usual and customary way, the duties of a common laborer and man of all work, in and around the premises of defendant, to do and perform such work and services as, in the language of the plaintiff, “should be directed and required of him as ?. laborer.” His wages were $9 a week, and up to the average paid
We cannot, in the light of the evidence, regard whitewashing, and the slacking of lime as incident thereto, as outside the scope of the general employment of such a laborer as the plaintiff is proved to have been. He must, therefore, be considered to have assumed the risk incident to his employment. Whitewashing, and the slacking of lime for that purpose, is one of the commonest of domestic services. No special skill or training, and the slightest experience only, are required to perform it. That heat and steam are evolved in the slacking of lime, is almost as much a matter of common knowledge as that boiling water will produce steam, and it cannot be seriously contended that any special duty of protection is owing by the employer to a laborer of mature years and intelligence, who assumes, upon request, the work of slacking lime for the purpose of whitewashing.' The employer, in this case, is not to be complained against for assuming that such a man understands, as well as the employer, all that is necessary to be understood about the work he undertakes. This, we think, is in accord with the well-settled doctrine of the numerous cases dealing with the law of master and servant, and the assumption of risk of employment by the servant. But it is urged on behalf of the plaintiff, that the vessel or receptacle in which, the lime was slacked was selected by the defendant’s foreman, and that a special danger attached to the slacking of lime therein, of which the plaintiff was ignorant, and as to which he was not informed by the defendant. This receptacle, as appears by the evidence, was a metallic cylinder or drum, 18 inches high and 1224 inches in diameter. These drums had been used for holding chloride of lime in the manufacture of chloroform. When discarded for that use, they lay around the yard, and were, as we have seen, sometimes used for ashes and waste material. That such a receptacle should have suggested itself either to the plaintiff or to the defendant’s foreman, was most likely, answering better than what has been described as the usual receptacles for such purpose, barrels and buckets.
It is not denied that the so-called “explosion” was occasioned by the pouring of too little water on the lime at first, and afterwards, when it had become heated and the water absorbed, adding a small quantity of water to the heated material. The gas or steam instantaneously produced by this operation was the cause of the injury, by blowing up the lime into the face of the plaintiff, who was leaning over the drum. The same causes would have produced the same results, if the lime had been slacked in a barrel or a pail. There is nothing in the evidence to show the contrary. The danger of its happening was incident to the employment of slacking the lime in any ordinary receptacle. As such, its risk was assumed by the plaintiff in undertaking the work. There is no evidence to show that such .a thing had happened before at these works, though these drums had been used, or that the defendant had any information in regard thereto, not possessed by the plaintiff, nor is there any more reason for saying that defendant ought to have known of the likelihood or danger of such a happening, than that the plaintiff
The expert testimony, describing the chemical action of water upon lime, in scientific terms, and what the precise effect of using too little water at first and adding small quantities afterwards to the superheated lime in such a vessel as a barrel, bucket, or drum, and the danger incident thereto, does not at all affect or qualify our judgment in this respect. Scientific knowledge is not in this respect better than common knowledge, to assist the ordinary man in performing this work, or in avoiding the dangers incident thereto. Nor does it help us in determining in this case, whether ordinary care was exercised by defendant, in permitting the use of the drum for making the whitewash in. To hold the contrary of this, would impose upon the thrifty housewife, who employed a chance laborer to whitewash her garden fence, the duty of giving instructions to one she had every reason to believe was as well or better informed on the subject than herself, and would expose her to a possible liability that would indeed be startling.
We have examined the numerous and familiar cases cited by the defendant in error, dealing with the duty of the master to use ordinary care in providing a safe place in which, and safe appliances with which, a servant is to work, and also his duty to inform his servant of the dangers incident to the special work in which he was employed, and of which the master is informed, or ought to be informed, and of which the servant is ignorant. None of them are applicable to the case at bar. In our opinion, there is no proof of a want of ordinary care on the part of the defendant, in furnishing to the plaintiff a safe place in which to work, or, assuming that the drum was furnished by defendant, for the purpose of making whitewash, safe appliances with which to work. The explosion caused by putting a small quantity of water on the superheated lime, was a danger, whether due to plaintiff’s own negligence, or not, incident to his employment, and as to which the defendant had no greater knowledge, or means of knowledge, than had the plaintiff.
The judgment below is therefore reversed.