201 Mass. 377 | Mass. | 1909
The jury were warranted in finding the following to be the facts in the case. The plaintiff was a boy sixteen years of age. He had been in the defendant’s employ some eight months. But it was not until three or four days before the day of the accident here complained of that he was sent to work in the part of the factory where this accident occurred. At that time he was told to act as assistant to one Mason, in stencilling boilers. On the day of the accident he had been stencilling boilers with Mason, in the shipping room on the third floor of the factory. When this work was done Mason went to the machine shop to get a new stencil, and told the plaintiff to get the elevator up and bring down to the first floor the trucks, paint pot, stencil and brushes. The elevator was an ordinary freight elevator, operated by a shipper rope running up through the several floors outside of but close to the elevator well. This shipper rope was on the driveway side of the elevator well, close to one of the two uprights on which the elevator ran. Boilers were stacked up on all four sides of the elevator well, with the exception of a narrow passage about two feet wide, left between the boilers on the Harvard Street side of the elevator. The Harvard Street side was at right angles to the shipper rope or driveway side. By reason of the boilers being stacked up on all four sides of the elevator well, this two foot passageway was the only means of getting to the shipper rope. The elevator well was equipped with hatch covers or doors attached to the floor in question by hinges. These doors covered the well hole when the elevator was above or below the floor; they were thrown up
The plaintiff testified and the jury could have found that he had used the elevator but three times before the accident, and that on each of those three times he had come up on the elevator and gone down on it before it left the floor, and therefore that before the day in question he had not seen the hatch covers when they were over the well hole.
The oil on which the plaintiff fell came from a leaky drip pan hung under the sheaves over which the wire rope ran by which the elevator was hung and was hauled up and down. This drip pan was described by one of the plaintiff’s witnesses as follows: It was made by the defendant’s employees and put up some six or eight months before the accident to the plaintiff. It was made out of a piece of tin turned up about one and one half inches on the four sides, and not soldered together at the corners; and it leaked when put up and had continued to leak ever since. This witness then testified “ that the day before the accident1 he was up on the third floor and noticed there was more or less grease and dirt on the elevator doors, not thick, but just a skimming of oil, kind of coated over with dust that always lays around the shop. It wasn’t thick stuff that you could see by looking at it, but was kind of grease with a dust covering”; that “ the elevator door as he noticed it on his various trips to the third floor, always had oil and dirt on it.” The oil spot on the door began about a foot and a half from the edge of the door, in the centre of the well, was from fifteen to eighteen inches wide, and ran down to the upright near the shipper rope, or within a foot or so of the upright.
The plaintiff also testified that “the elevator moved very slowly,” and there was no testimony contradicting or modifying the fact so testified to.
The plaintiff also testified “that he never before had seen the doors down; that in going over the trap doors at the time of the accident he did not see any oil or foreign substance on the door, and no person in the defendant’s employ had ever told him that there was any oil or foreign substance on the door.”
The plaintiff went to the jury on a count based on negligence of the defendant in setting him to work in a dangerous, place without notifying him of the dangers connected therewith. The presiding judge refused to direct the jury to return a verdict for the defendant. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff, and the case is here on an exception to- that refusal, with an agreement that if the ruling was right judgment should be entered on the verdict, and that if the ruling was wrong judgment should be entered for the defendant.
The first question to be considered is whether on this evidence it could have been found that the accident was caused by a failure to perform a duty owed by the defendant to the plaintiff.
It is usually said that an employee assumes the risk of the obvious conditions of the building in which he accepts employment. That is true. It is more accurate however to say that an employer is under no duty to an employee to change the obvious condition of the building in which the employee accepts employment. It is pointed out in Mc Cafferty v. Lewando’s French Dyeing & Cleansing Co. 194 Mass. 412, that the principle on which this rule is founded is the principle on which the rule of caveat emptor is founded in a sale of property, and on which the rule is founded that a landlord is not liable for the ruinous condition of leased premises.
An application of the underlying principle which is almost if not quite an exact parallel is in case of the lease of a tenement including a right to use common passageways which remain in the control of the landlord. In such a case the landlord owes
Were it not for the oil spot on the elevator covers or doors, it is hard to see why the plaintiff did not have a right to go to the jury for not repairing the drip pan. For although from the description of it given by the plaintiff’s witnesses oil must have run out of it if there was any more than a very small quantity in it, yet it did not appear that there was oil in it all the time. It was entirely possible that oil would not be running out of it when the time came for the plaintiff to inspect the premises with a view to accepting employment in them. And if oil was not in fact dropping from the pan then, it would be hard to say as matter of law that the faulty construction of the pan was obvious to an employee making an inspection of the building with a view to deciding whether he would or would not work in it.
But we are of opinion that as matter of law on the evidence the oil spot on the cover was obvious and for that reason the defendant owed no duty for it or for the faulty construction of the drip pan which produced it.
This case does not come within Dene v. Arnold Print Works, 181 Mass. 560, Murphy v. American Rubber Co. 159 Mass. 266, and Tinkham v. Sawyer, 153 Mass. 485. There the plaintiff accepted work on or around machinery which meant that oil would of necessity be used where he worked, and that the floor would of necessity be oily. The room where this plaintiff went to work was in a loft used as a shipping room. The fact that the defendant ran a factory for making boilers was of no moment so far as the employment was concerned in the course of which the plaintiff was hurt.
The learned counsel for the plaintiff contend that they made out a case for the jury (1) because the plaintiff testified that “ it was dark in the elevator well and it was made so by the boilers all around the well ”; and (2) because another of his witnesses (Schofield by name) testified “ that the day before the accident he was up on the third floor and noticed there was more or less grease and dirt on the elevator doors, not thick, but just a skimming of oil, kind of coated over with dust that always lays
In determining how far the jury could go in making a finding based on this evidence, there are two things to be kept in mind. In the first place the plaintiff testified that the loft was as light as the court room except for the boilers, and that the boilers around the elevator were stacked up “ four or five feet in height.” No other witness testified that it was dark there. The question therefore is how far this testimony, standing alone, would justify the jury in making a finding.
The second thing which must be kept in mind in this connection is that no witness testified directly to the fact that the oil spot would not be seen, unless the testimony quoted above can be taken to be testimony to that effect.
We are of opinion that the plaintiff’s testimony as to the darkness and Schofield’s testimony as to the “ skimming of oil,” “ kind of coated over with dust,” did not warrant a finding that the oil spot was not obvious. As we have said, Schofield testified on cross-examination that “ he could see the dirt and oil.” Three witnesses only were put on the stand by the plaintiff’s counsel. The third was a fellow employee who swept the floor in question every Saturday. The accident to the plaintiff happened on a Friday. He testified that “ each Saturday . . . the elevator doors were covered with more or less oil and dirt. Sometimes there was more, sometimes less; . . . that he had seen oil drop from above on to the elevator doors; . . . that he picked up a small shovelful each time he swept.”
Taking the evidence as a whole, we are of opinion that such an oil spot would be obvious on an inspection by an employee. It follows that the defendant could not be made liable by reason of oil on the hatch cover of the elevator.
The plaintiff’s contention that this was the first time that he had seen the hatch covers down and that he did not in fact see the oil at that time is disposed of by McCafferty v. Lewando's French Dyeing & Cleansing Co. 194 Mass. 412. The question we are now considering is not whether the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, but whether the defendant owed the
We are of opinion that the plaintiff was not entitled to go to the jury on any of these grounds.
But we are of opinion that on the other ground put forward by the learned counsel for the plaintiff he did have a right to go to the jury. The last ground taken by him is that it was negligent to pile up the boilers so as to leave the two foot passageway on the Harvard Street side as the only means of access to the shipper rope. His contention is that the boilers had been so piled up for three or four days, and that, as the defendant knew that they were so piled up and gave no orders to change them, the situation was the same as if he had originally given the order that they should be piled up as they were. He relies in this connection on the opinion in Reed v. Boston & Albany Railroad, 164 Mass. 129. Even if it would not be negligent to pile up the boilers so that an employee had to cross the hatch covers to get at the shipping rope under ordinary circumstances, we are of opinion that it might be found to be negligent to do so when the hatch cover door-was slippery from oil.
The only question left is whether as matter of law the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in crossing the hatch cover as he did.
The case at bar does not come within the class of cases where a plaintiff is precluded from recovering for the negligence of the defendant because he knew the facts, appreciated the risk and voluntarily exposed himself to the danger. Goddard v. McIntosh, 161 Mass. 253. Larkin v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad, 166 Mass. 110. Tenanty v. Boston Manuf. Co. 170 Mass. 323. Davis v. Forbes, 171 Mass. 548. See also Fitzgerald v. Connecticut River Paper Co. 155 Mass. 155,158,162; and Burgess v. Davis Sulphur Ore Co. 165 Mass. 71, 73. The plaintiff in the case at bar testified that he did not in fact know that the floor was slippery, and that he did know “that the elevator moved very slowly.” Under these circumstances he did not know of the risk which caused the accident, and the case comes within cases like Hickey v. Waltham, 159 Mass. 460. See Wagner v. Boston Elevated Railway, 188 Mass. 437, at p. 441; Urquhart v. Smith
In deciding whether as matter of law the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, the fact that he assumed the risk of the oil is not material. The defendant owed him no duty as to the oil because he' must be taken to have assumed the risk. But the question whether the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence depends upon what he knew in fact.
It appears from the plaintiff’s evidence that the boilers were stacked up around the elevator well, as they were at the time of the accident, on the day when he first went to work in the loft, and that they remained so throughout the time of his employment. Had the elevator well been permanently fenced in by barriers which were as matter of construction part of the building (as the elevator well was in fact fenced in by the boilers) the defendant would have owed no duty to the plaintiff by reason of the two foot passageway being the only access to the shipper rope. But the rule that an employee assumes the risk of what is obvious in the building in which he voluntarily consents to work does not apply to a dangerous condition caused by carrying on the work in a negligent way. An employer owes to his employees the duty of using due care to provide his employees with a safe place in which to work. It is for a failure to perform that duty that the plaintiff had a right to go to the jury in the case at bar. See in this connection Boucher v. Robeson Mills, 182 Mass. 500, 502 ; Chambers v. Wampanoag Mills, 189 . Mass. 529, 534.
It is not necessary to consider whether it was open to the plaintiff, under the count on which he went to the jury, to make the contention which we have adopted. No question of pleading seems to have been raised at the trial. The ruling asked for by the defendant was “ that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover,” not that he was not entitled to recover on the evidence and pleadings. The agreement of parties was “ that if his [the judge’s] ruling was right, judgment should be entered on the verdict.” We are of opinion that apart from the
Exceptions overruled.