The action was brought by a servant against the master, for damages alleged to have been sustained by the servant as the result of injuries caused by the master’s negligence. A motion for nonsuit was granted, and the plaintiff excepted. The plaintiff’s evidence is confusing and contradictory. It may be gathered from it that he had been in the employment of the defendant about eight' or nine months, working as a common laborer around the dwelling of the defendant, his duties requiring him to carry wood into the kitchen and to work about the kitchen. The defendant occupied a dwelling which was equipped with plumbing, and there was in the kitchen a metal tank large enough to hold ninety gallons of water, resting on a stool 18 or 20 inches high. In one part of his testimony the plaintiff said that the tank contained cold water all the time, but in another part he declared he thought the tank was empty all the time. The water-pipe in the basement had burst, and the defendant and the plaintiff went down to cut off the water so -as to stop the leak. The defendant cut off the water, and went up stairs, instructing the plaintiff to come up stairs when he had finished with the work he was directed to do. In about five minutes the plaintiff ascended the stairs and went into the kitchen, where the defendant was standing by the tank near the stove. What occurred then was described by the plaintiff as follows: “When I got up there in the kitchen, going from the basement, Mr. Blanchard [the defendant] had a pipe-wrench and
The plaintiff alleged in his petition that he did not know that the tank contained water, nor did he know that the defendant had disconnected the tank at its top from the plumbing; and that the defendant was negligent in failing to give him warning of these matters. His testimony is too confused and contradictory to establish the defendant’s alleged acts of negligence. His testimony
Judgment affirmed.
