11 Or. 257 | Or. | 1884
By tlie Court,
This was an action to recover damages for injuries received by the plaintiff while in the employ of the defendant as a laborer in the construction of a shed on the south side of the dry dock at Oregon City.
By his complaint, the plaintiff attributes his injuries to
According to the bill of exceptions, the evidence tended to show, in substance, the following state of -facts:
That the plaintiff was in the defendant’s employ, at or about the dry dock at Oregon City, as a common laborer; that one Collins directed one Brown to take plaintiff, Barclay and Newman, and construct a shed on the top of the dry dock, to be made of rough lumber, and about seventy-five feet in length, and about ten feet wide, the walk-way of the dock being the floor of the shed, and consisted of several long posts, most of them about ten feet apart, and spiked at the foot to the sloping side of the dock. The back or south side of the dock had shorter posts, extending about seven feet above the top of the dock. A plate, or stringer, ran along from post to post on either side of the shed near the top of each post.
This plate was from one and a half to two and a half inches thick, and five or six inches wide. At the top of each post a notch or “gain” was cut to receive the plate, so as to leave the outside of the plate flush with the outside of the posts, and the upper edge flush with the top of the posts. The roof consisted-of rough boards-laid from the high plate on the north of the shed to the low plate on the south. On the morning of the accident, the plaintiff examined the long post at the northeast corner of the shed, and thinking it not securely, fastened at the foot, went down into the dock and put more nails into the foot.
Pieces of lumber, six inches wide and two inches thick, called “spawls,” were nailed against the sides of the long posts, three or four feet below their top. The other end of these pieces rested on the south plate. These pieces
While plaintiff was nailing the foot of the corner post, some one put a piece of lumber across the spawls, as if to be used as a scaffold. The plaintiff did not know, and from his position could not see, who put this lumber in its place.
Barclay and Brown had cut all the other “gains” except the one remaining to be cut in the corner post, and the stringer or plate had been put in the gains so cut, and spiked in some of them. In cutting the “gains” at the top of the posts, and spiking the plate upon them it was necessary for the person doing the work to stand on a scaffold or plank nineteen feet above the dry dock.
Brown had been appointed by Collins to superintend the construction of the shed, and had directed plaintiff to get up there and cut the gain in the corner post and fit the stringer in place. Plaintiff placed, as ordered, a prop or shore under the end of the stringer, which extended beyond the corner post, so as to raise the upper end of the stringer, which extended beyond the corner post, level with the top of the post, in order to make the place for the “gain.”
Plaintiff then got upon the plank, which had been lain for a scaffold across the “spawls” and'wdiich was about six inches wide, two thick and several feet long. While plaintiff was on the scaffold, Collins coming along, directed him to knock the shore from under the end of the plate upon the top of the post so as to enable him to saw the post for the “gain.” Plaintiff removed and undertook to lift the plate to the top of the post, when the piece of lumber on which he was standing broke and he fell. The lumber to build the shed was furnished by the foreman of Broughton’s mill which was about three hundred yards distant from the dry dock.
The testimony was conflicting as to whether the defect was open to ordinary observation before the piece was broken.
The evidence also further tended to show that Brown, upon discovering the unsound condition of the lumber, reported its condition to Collins, who told, him to throw it away and not to use it, to throw it overboard and go to the mills and make them furnish sound lumber in its stead; that the unsound pieces were thereupon thrown away and were replaced with new lumber brought from the mill by , the plaintiff and Brown. It will be observed that the case made by the pleadings, and to which the proof as shown by the bill of exceptions was directed, was the alleged negligence of the defendant in not providing sound lumber for the scaffold.
It is not alleged, nor is it the object of the proof to show, that the defendant was guilty of any negligence in the selection or employment of unskillful co-servants, by reason of which the injury to the plaintiff was occasioned.
The contention is that it was the duty of the defendant
The court charged the jury that it was “the duty of the defendant that each of the co-servants it employs, is possessed of reasonable skill, so that one servant shall be protected from injury by the negligence or unskillfulness of another. And if an employer is careless or negligent in employing unskillful servants * * * and one of its servants suffers injury and damages from its carelessness, without any fault of his own, he can recover compensation for such injury from such negligence.” This instruction presents to the jury a question not put in issue by the pleadings, nor warranted by the facts in evidence. It directs the attention of the jury as to the duty of the defendant in the selection and employment of its servants, and in effect charges that the defendant is liable, if it was careless or negligent in the employing unskillful servants. By the pleadings and proof, no question is intended to be raised as to the liability of the defendant for not exercising ordinary care in the selection and employment of proper fellow ser
There is no doubt that it is the duty of the master to exercise reasonable care in the selection of fit servants for the duties for which they are engaged to perform, and that for a failure in this regard, if an injury happens to another servant, the master is liable to an action for damages suffered by siich servant. This is elementary. As an abstract proposition of law, the instruction may be conceded to be unobjectionable, but the vice of it lies not alone in its inapplicability to the issues presented and the facts proved, but from the kindred nature of the subjects, in its manifest tendency to mislead the jury by authorizing them to find a liability upon a state of facts not warranted by the evidence. Besides, it diverts the attention of the jury from that which was, to that which was not in issue, and assumes the existence and asserts the liability of the defendant upon a state of facts wholly at variance with the evidence.
‘ When an instruction is based upon a state of facts not warranted by the evidence, the manifest tendency of which is, from the special features of the case, to lead the jury to infer the existence of such facts and thereby take an erroneous view of the case, it is ground for reversal, although such instruction may be correct as an abstract proposition of law. (Michigan Bank v. Eldred, 9 Wall., 554; Hastings v. St. Louis, etc., R. Co., 58 Mo., 302; Harrison v. Cachelin, 27 Mo., 26; Hess v. Wilcox, 58 Iowa, 380; Manning v. Burlington C. R. and N. R. Co., 60 Iowa; Howes S. Machine Co. v. Layman, 88 Ill., 39; Chicago and Alton R. Co. v. Mock, 72 Ill., 141; Thompson v. Shannon, 9 Texas, 556; Burns v. Kelty, 41 Miss., 339; Hays v. Hinds, 28 Ind., 553; Milton v. Rowland, 11 Ala., 732; Clark v. Dutcher, 9 Cow., 647; Thompson on Charging Juries, secs.
The objection to the seventh instruction is that it undertakes to define, but incorrectly, as claimed, the responsibility of the defendant to one employee for the negligence of another standing as vice-principal. The adjudications to the effect that a master is not liable to a servant for an injury resulting from a fellow servant engaged in a common employment, present an almost unbroken line. (Thompson on Neg., Vol. 2, 967, 970, and note 2.) “The reason upon which this rule rests is,” says Mr. Justice Mercer, in Lehigh Valley Coal Co. v. Jones, 86 Penn. St., 179, “that each one who enters upon the service of another, takes on himself all the ordinary risks of the employment in which he engages, and that the negligence of his fellow-workman, in the general course of his employment, are within the ordinary risks.” But many cases present facts which renders it difficult to determine just what relations to each other and to their master, will constitute two persons fellow servants •within the meaning of the rule.
The fact that the servant injured is inferior in grade and authority to the one by whose negligence the injury is caused, will make no difference. (Sherman and Redfield on Neg., sec. 100; Blake v. Maine Central R. Co., 70 Me., 60; McAndrews v. Burns, 39 N. J. Law., 115; Lehigh Valley Coal Co. v. Jones, 86 Penn. St., 132; Thompson on Neg., Vol. 2, 1028, and notes.) To constitute one vice-principal, or superior servant, the master must have committed to him the substantial control of the business, and the power to do all acts necessary to its conduct. (Peterson v. Whitebreast Coal Co., 50 Iowa, 673; Cocoran v. Holbrook, 59 N. Y., 517; Lanning v. N. Y. R. Co., 49 N. Y., 521; Sherman and Nedfield on Neg., sec. 102.) In Mullan
(See also Louisville R. R. Co. v. Collins, 2 Duv., 114; Malone v. Hathaway, 64 N. Y., 5; Smith v. Oxford Iron Co., 13 Vroom, 467; Lalor v. Chicago R. R. Co., 52 Ill., 401; Cleveland, etc., R. Co. v. Keany, 3 Ohio St., 201; Beasa Stone Co. v. Kraft, 31 Ohio St., 287; Ford v. Fitchburg R. Co., 11 Mass., 214; Hough v. R. Co., 100 U. S. R., 214.)
The point of contention in the cases has been as to when the negligence of che servant can be imputed to the master. Now, the objection of the defendant is that the instruction is misleading, in that it would include Brown as vice-principal, and thus impute his negligence to the defendant, and this is precisely what the plaintiff claims Brown was, and “not a fellow servant with the plaintiff.” The evidence shows that Collins was the superintendent of the dry dock;
The lumber was furnished by the foreman of Broughton’s mill near by, and he testifies, not having new lumber enough, he furnished about a half dozen pieces of old lumber. When in the course of construction of the shed, Brown discovered these unsound pieces, he reported the fact to the superintendent, Collins, who ordered him to throw them away and go to the mill and make them furnish sound lumber instead, and the evidence shows that these old pieces were thrown away and replaced by new lumber, brought by the plaintiff and Brown from the mill. Why does he report the fact to Collins? - Evidently because he had no authority to act in the premises and throw the old lumber away and replace it with new without Collins’ consent or order.
This is inconsistent with the idea that the defendant had placed the entire charge of the business in the hands of Brown, exercising no discretion or oversight therein, whereby Brown became authorized and required by his employment to furnish or provide suitable material or appliances for the building of the shed-—the work in which he and his fellow servants were engaged. Being merely foreman of the gang and leading off in the work is not sufficient to constitute him vice-principal. In the construction of the shed, and in doing all things necessary to effectuate that object,
The driving of additional nails in the foot of the corner posts and in the spawls of the scaffold, to strengthen and make it more secure, all tend to show a common service, and that plaintiff had quite as much skill, authority and control in the construction of the shed as his co-laborers. In view of this, some other matters to which reference was made, need not be considered.
The judgment is reversed and a new trial ordered.