98 A. 206 | Md. | 1916
Alexander S. Monroe was employed by the Westinghouse Electric Manufacturing Company on December 6th, 1913, and went to work two days later. The job on which he was assigned to work was the installation in the Westport Power House of the Consolidated Gas Electric Light and Power *61 Company of additional apparatus, by means of which the power was to be supplied for operating the Maryland Railway Company. At the time of his employment Mr. Monroe had been working for four or five years on the erection or installation of electrical appliances of various kinds. Originally engaged as a workman, by the second of February Mr. Monroe had become the foreman on this particular piece of work. On the last named date, and while putting a converter in place, his head came in contact with a switch which was charged with a current of 13000 volts, and he received a shock from the effects of which he died on the seventh of March following. This suit was brought under the provisions of the Code, Art. 67, secs. 1-4, for the benefit of his widow and minor son for the injury resulting to them from his death, under an allegation that the accident was due to the negligence of one or the other or both of the defendants.
During the progress of the trial twenty-six exceptions were reserved to rulings in regard to the admissibility of evidence, and one to the action of the Court on the 57 prayers presented to the Court.
By the granting of the 8th, 13th and 16th prayers offered on behalf of the Westinghouse Company, and the 2d 3rd, 4th, 6th, 7th and 8th prayers of the Gas Company, the 2d 3rd and 4th counts of the declaration were withdrawn from the consideration of the jury and these rulings disposed of the 9th, 10th, 11th, 14th, 15th, 17th, 18th, 19th and 20th prayers of the Westinghouse Company, and the 10th, 11th, 12th, 14th, 15th and 16th prayers of the Gas Company, and of a number of the exceptions relating to the admissibility of evidence. None of these are now before the Court for review, the plaintiff not having taken any appeal.
The only questions which remain are whether there was any act or omission on the part of either defendant which amounted to actionable negligence; whether there was any contributory negligence on the part of Monroe; and whether or not the accident which occasioned his death was one of the risks of the employment which he assumed. *62
It will not be necessary for the purpose of reaching a conclusion on these questions to consider each exception and the remaining prayers seriatim, but it will suffice to deal with the facts disclosed by the record, applying the already well-defined principles of law applicable to such cases.
The allegations of negligence set out by the plaintiffs in the first count of the declaration are as to the Westinghouse Company, that it failed to provide the deceased a reasonably safe place in which to work, and as to the Gas Company that it allowed the wires and switch where Monroe suffered his shock to become charged with a powerful and deadly current of electricity, which fact was unknown to Monroe and could not have been known to him in the exercise of ordinary care.
That a master is obliged to provide a servant with a reasonably safe place in which to perform his duties has been settled by a long and unbroken line of decisions of which Manuel v.Cumberland,
This rule has been distinctly recognized in this State in a number of cases. Thus it is said in Eckhardt v. LazaretteCo.,
And in Gans Salvage Co. v. Byrnes,
And the same doctrine has also been announced in Linton v.Balto. Mnfg. Co.,
Fortunately there is no conflict in the evidence in this case. The salient and material facts are easily summarized: Monroe, the deceased, had been engaged for four or five years in working about electric wires, appliances and connections, and "must have necessarily acquired knowledge in the ordinary pursuit of his duties," of the danger incident to working upon or about wires and switches charged or liable to become charged with high and dangerous currents of electricity. That the place where his work was to be done was a dangerous one was shown by the cells, in one of which he received the fatal shock, being protected by a rail at a little distance in front, upon which in large letters the word "danger" appeared together with the Universal danger sign. And as if this was not sufficient there was suspended directly in front of the particular cell by cords an additional sign reading "13000 volts," which had been made that day by Monroe and his helper Ball. He is, therefore, shown not only to have been aware of the fact of the dangerous character of the place, but of the approximate power of the current at or *65 in close proximity to the place where he was at work. There was no evidence in contradiction of this, and it was, therefore, error to have refused the 22nd prayer of the Westinghouse Company by which the jury was instructed to find a verdict for that defendant upon the basis of the risk assumed by the husband and father of the equitable plaintiffs.
As regards the Gas Company the situation is somewhat different. The 19th prayer offered on behalf of that company was doubtless intended to have raised the question of the assumption of risk as to that company, and with a modification was granted by the Court. The equitable plaintiffs not having appealed, that prayer is not strictly before this Court for review, but it was unfortunately phrased and the natural tendency of it was to mislead the jury. Passing that by, was there any evidence of such negligence on the part of the Gas Company as to justify the submission of the case to the jury? The current in the bus-bar, connecting to the cell where Moore was at work, was generated by the Gas Company. The end of the building in which the work was being done was devoted to manufacturing the current which furnished power for the operation of the Maryland Railway Company. The negligence, if any there was on the part of the Gas Company, consisted in the cutting in of the current to this portion of the building. That it could be and had been so cut in was known to the deceased, for on the Saturday night before the Monday on which this accident happened, he had been present or actually assisted in cutting the current out. The presence of the current in the bus-bar and switches was necessary if the railway was to be operated, and here the language of JUDGE THOMAS, inLinton v. Baltimore Mfg. Co.,
There is a duty resting upon the servant to avoid injuries to himself and if he fails to do so that does not constitute negligence on the part of the employer, and it is a self-evident proposition that there can be no contributing negligence by a servant unless there is evidence tending to show primary negligence on the part of the master. That evidence being lacking in this case there was error in refusing the first prayer of the Gas Company.
In view of what has been said it does not seem necessary to review one by one the remaining exceptions as the questions already considered are determinative of this appeal, and the judgment must be reversed.
Judgment reversed without a new trial. *67