38 Wash. 313 | Wash. | 1905
On the 24th day of March, 1903, the plaintiff in this action was in the employ of the defendant, and was engaged in talcing down and removing a telephone pole, at the corner of Fourth avenue and Marion street, in the city of Seattle: The pole was about forty-five feet in length, thirteen inches in diameter a,t the butt, and six or
The telephone pole was taken down or lowered in the following manner: The earth was first partially removed from the side towards which the pole was to' be lowered. The pole was then raised or lifted out of the hole
The pole which caused the injury complained of in this action was first placed on the dead-man handled by the plaintiff, and was then rocked over and lowered onto the
The following grounds of negligence were charged in the complaint: (1) That the respondent was inexperienced in the work of taking down poles, that the appellant’s foreman had knowledge of such inexperience
We are inclined to agree with the appellant that there was no proof to sustain the first and third charges of negligence, as above set forth. There was a sufficient supply of pikes for all of the men employed in the work of taking down the pole, and the respondent had been employed in and about the same kind of work for a period of about three months. His testimony shows him to be a
The appellant further contends that the second ground of negligence is not actionable, and cites, Grout v. Tacoma Eastern R. Co., 33 Wash. 524, 74 Pac. 665. This is, in a measure, true. It appears in this case that the pole in question might have been taken down in entire safety with less men than were actually employed, but the lesser number would have to go about the
■ Was the respondent guilty of contributory negligence ? It is not sufficient to say, or to show, that he would have received no injury had he remained by his dead-man. He was placed in a dangerous position through what the jury had a right to find was negligence on the part of the appellant. A telephone pole, weighing some six or seven hundred pounds, was suspended in mid air above him, beyond the control of the pikemen. He knew it would fall, but had not the time to consider when or where. On the impulse of the moment, he took what seemed to him the
We will now .pass to a consideration of the other assignments of error. We have carefully examined the instructions given and the requests refused, and think that the law applicable to the case was'fully and fairly stated to the jury. Over the objection of the appellant, the court permitted the respondent to testify that the foreman warned him to run at the time he left his dead-man, immediately before the accident. If the act of the foreman in this regard were relied on to establish negligence on the part of the appellant, the objection might be well taken. But we think the testimony was admissible on another ground. It was incumbent upon the respondent to' prove negligence on the part of the appellant, and a want of negligence on his own part. While the burden is not ordinarily on the. plaintiff to prove the absence of contributory negligence, ’as a part of his main case, yet, it behooves him not to prove contributory negligence affirmatively. Anri if he does prove facts from which contributory negligence might be inferred, as a part of his main ease, he has a right to rebut this inference in his main case. Otherwise a nonsuit would cut him off, so that he would never have the opportunity. .In determining whether or not the respondent was guilty of contributory negligence, under the circumstances, the warning given by the foreman or others, in the moment of peril, was competent evidence.
“We think that in reason and upon the authority of the better considered cases, it must be held that it is a positive duty which the master owes to an employee not only to provide him with a reasonably safe place in which to work—so far as the nature of the work undertaken and the exigencies of the case will permit the same to be made reasonably safe—but also to observe such care as will not expose the employee to perils and dangers which may be guarded against by reasonable care and diligence; and where the performance of this positive duty is by the master entrusted to another, his failure to perform is the failure of the master. The discharge of this duty was in the ease at bar entrusted by appellant to its foreman, Nolan. He was the superintending officer at the place where the work was being performed, with full power and control over the plaintiff and all others connected in the active discharge of the work. Hnder the circumstances we think it follows that his negligence was the negligence of the company.”