119 Me. 469 | Me. | 1920
This case comes up on motion and exceptions. One of the exceptions must be sustained. The justice, in his charge, with respect to the duty resting upon the employer to furnish a place for the employee to work in, stated the measure of duty as follows: “It is necessary for the defendant to furnish a safe, .a reasonably safe place, for his employees to work; he is bound to furnish a reasonably safe place.” The whole charge is printed and made a part of the case, but a careful examination discloses no modification of the language or meaning of the rule as above given. Nor are w,e able to say from the record which is also made a part of the exceptions that the evidence so strongly predominates in favor of the plaintiff as to make the inadvertence a case of harmless error.
There may be a marked distinction in the duty of being bound to furnish a reasonably safe place, and exercising reasonable care to do so. A place may not be reasonably safe, and on account of not being so, may be the proximate cause of an injury, and yet if the employer has exercised reasonable care to make it reasonably safe he is not hable.
If the place is, as a matter of fact, reasonably safe, it is immaterial whether the employer exercises any care.
It is only when the place is not reasonably safe, that the test of due care is invoked.
The question then at once arises: The place not being reason ably safe, has the employer exercised due care to make it reasonably safe? Has he done what a reasonably prudent and careful man would have done, in the particular instance? In Hull v. Hall, 78 Maine, 117, it is said:
“The implied duty of the master being measured by the legal standard of ordinary care, his knowledge or want of knowledge of the actual condition of the machinery when it falls below the legal standard of being reasonably safe and causes the injury, becomes a material element. . . . When the master, there
But if an employer is bound to furnish a reasonably safe place then the test of due care is entirely eliminated. It matters not how much care the employer has exercised if, as a matter of fact, the place is not reasonably safe, he is liable, so far as the element of place is concerned.
It accordingly appears that the definition of the duty of an employer in furnishing a place for his workmen is in no sense technical, but one which carefully differentiates between making the employer an insurer of the reasonable safety of the place, and an observer of the universal rule of reasonable care to furnish such a place. If is unnecessary to cite cases, as the definition of the duty is usually found to be as stated in Elliott v. Sawyer, 107 Maine, 201: “It is admittedly the duty of a master to u§e reasonable care to furnish for his servant a reasonably safe place for him to do his work.”
Exceptions sustained.