160 A. 437 | Md. | 1932
By a demurrer, which the trial court sustained, the defendant corporation questioned the sufficiency of a declaration which alleged, in effect, that, as the owner and operator of a line of telephone poles and wires in Somerset County, it entered into an agreement with a firm of contractors for certain alterations, improvements, and additions to its line; that, in the course of the work required by the contract, the *574 husband of one of the personal plaintiffs, upon whom she and his father, another plaintiff, were dependent, was engaged as a lineman in the employ of the contractors in the performance of his duty at or near the top of one of the defendant's poles, and was fatally injured by the fall of the pole in consequence of its decayed and defective condition, of which the employee and the contractors were not aware, and which they could not observe by ordinary care, but which the defendant knew or should have known, in the exercise of due care for the safety of employees required to ascend it in the course of their duty, and negligently failed to warn the contractors and their employees of its condition; and that the corporate plaintiff, as insurer, is obligated to pay an award by the State Industrial Accident Commission to the dependents of the deceased employee under the Workmen's Compensation Law of Maryland. The suit is brought under the provision of that act authorizing action by an injured employee, or by his dependents in case of his death from a compensable accident, and by the insurer, to enforce the legal liability of any person other than the employer to pay damages on account of the injury or death for which compensation under the act is payable. Code, art. 101, sec. 58.
In support of the demurrer it was argued that the terms of the agreement between the defendant and the contractors should have been alleged in the declaration. For the purpose of this suit the reference to the contract is adequate. It was appropriately averred as the occasion for the deceased lineman's rightful presence on the defendant's property at the time and place of his injury, and it is described to the extent necessary to show that he was acting as an employee of independent contractors. Its terms and effect were not required to be more particularly stated.
It is said that the defendant is not in the position of a "person other than the employer," and is therefore not amenable to this action under the provision already cited. But the adoption of that theory is prevented by the tenor of the declaration and by prior decisions of this court. It is *575
alleged that the injured lineman was the employee of a contractor to whom the defendant had committed "certain alterations, improvements and additions" to its telephone line. In the brief for the defendant, on appeal, the declaration is construed as showing that the contractors were "intrusted" with the "entire work" therein described. Since the averments definitely exclude the theory that the lineman may have been an employee of the defendant corporation, the conclusion must follow, on demurrer, that the defendant is in the situation of a person other than the contractors by whom he is alleged to have been independently employed. This view is fully supported by the decisions inBethlehem Steel Co. v. Variety Co.,
It is contended that the declaration should have been more specific in its description of the condition which is alleged to have made the pole unsafe, and it is said to be hard to conceive how such a condition could have existed and have been ascertainable by the defendant and yet have escaped the observation of the lineman and the contractors if they were exercising due care. The opportunity of a lineman to learn the condition of a pole which his duty requires him to ascend is ordinarily equal to that of any of the owner's employees who may be detailed for its inspection. In Consolidated Gas Co. v.Chambers,
The principle which governed the decision in Consolidated GasCo. v. Chambers had previously been applied in Md. TelephoneCo. v. Cloman,
There is no statement in the present declaration that the defendant employed any system of inspection upon which the lineman relied as an assurance that the pole was safe for his ascent. It is not charged that the defendant failed to warn the lineman of a defective and unsafe condition of which it was actually aware, the assertion being simply that the defendant knew or should have known, in the exercise of due care, that such a condition existed. Nor is there any explanation as to why the decay in the pole was not discoverable by the lineman in the exercise of due care, if the same degree of care would have revealed it to an inspector. In these respects the declaration, in our opinion, is insufficient. It is not sustainable consistently with the rule of law applied in the former decisions of this court to which we have referred.
Except for the deficiencies just indicated, we consider the declaration proof against demurrer. But there has been no suggestion that it could be amended in those particulars with due regard to the facts. The demurrer was sustained by the trial court after the declaration had been amended twice, and judgment for the defendant was entered after the plaintiff had declined to make any further amendment. Under these circumstances, there appears to be no occasion to remand the case in order that another opportunity to amend may be afforded. Frisch v.Baltimore,
Judgment affirmed, with costs. *578