127 Minn. 364 | Minn. | 1914
This cause was retried to a jury after a reversal reported in 123
Tbe nature of tbe action and tbe facts showing tbe general situation are sufficiently stated in tbe reported case. In addition, however, to what is there set out, it appeared on tbe second trial that elevator shaft No. 3 was less than sis feet square; that deceased was directed to work in shaft No. 2 up to tbe time be stepped upon tbe car in shaft No. 3 almost immediately preceding tbe accident; that no directions or warnings were then given except that tbe ear in shaft No. 2 was about to go up; and that tbe workman Borchard, who was then standing on tbe car in shaft No. 3, was tbe person who responded ■“all right” before tbe other car moved.
“Tbe exact wording, of- course, I don’t remember now. In substance I told him to be very careful in tbe work in there, explaining bow tbe counterweights were running, that tbe counterweight of car No. 1 in shaft No. 2 was running in shaft No. 3.
“Q. Now, you say car No. 1 %
“A. In shaft No. 2; tbe first, shaft No. 1, has no car in, so I would*366 like to refer to tbe ear in shaft No. 2 as car No. 1, being that is only two cars in the shaft.”
“Q. Now, what was the substance of what you said to Uggen at that time about where the counterweights ran ? Tell us that now.
“A. I told him that the counterweight for car No. 2 was running in shaft No. 3, to he careful when the cars were moved.
“Q. Be careful about what ?
“A. Well, I don’t remember if I said anything more; that is about the substance of what I said at that time.” Later the witness admitted that these statements were made to the assembled workmen and not particularly to deceased.
Concerning the same matter, one of the workmen, the witness Borchard, testified:
“Q. Now, before the men started to work in the shaft at the eleventh floor, what did Mr. Shelgren say to the men then ?
“A. Well, he explained to us about the running of the elevator and the counterweights in the opposite shaft.”
“A. They were that when the elevator in shaft No. 2 was running, why, the weight would move in shaft 3, and that when the elevator in shaft No. 3 was running, why, the weight would be going up and down on the side of the elevator.”
“Q. * * * And where, if at all, did he say that the counterweights that were attached to the cable for the middle elevator run in the righthand shaft ?
“A. I don’t know.
“Q. You don’t remember ?
“A. I don’t remember that.”
On plaintiff’s part, as on the former trial, there was testimony of a negative nature by some of the workmen who were present when the alleged instructions were given, to the effect that they did not hear the warnings concerning the counterweights.
Under the facts a duty devolved upon defendant to instruct and warn deceased with reference to the running of the counterweights in shaft No. 3, before directing him to enter therein. Furthermore, the instructions given, in order to fill the full measure of this duty, must
Furthermore, as stated in the former opinion, the negative testimony, which is clearer than on the former trial, cannot be wholly disregarded. If the instructions given had been unquestionably sufficient, and it had been conclusively established that deceased heard them, this evidence would be of doubtful value; but such is not this
“But there are certain infirmities which inhere in oral instructions given as a rule of conduct. The language in which they are framed is passing, and not fixed. They are uncertain, and therefore open to constructions partaking of the bias and disposition of the employees. * * * At last, as here, when their existence, meaning, and import are called in question, when these have a vital bearing on the rights of litigants, it is left to the fallible and imperfect memory of witnesses to say that they existed, what they were, and what they meant.”
The court there held, in a case quite analogous, on principle, to the present, that the issue was for the jury. We hold likewise.
Order affirmed.