Slade v. Beattie

Braley, J.

It was admitted at the tidal that there was evidence which tended to prove negligence on the part of the *268defendants, in not furnishing their servant, the plaintiff’s intestate, reasonably safe and proper appliances with which to do his work; and the principal question raised by the report arises under the ruling that there could be no recovery either for his conscious suffering or death, because, at the time when he received the injuries from which he suffered and ultimately died, he was negligent and assumed the risk that the load of lumber under which he was passing might fall upon him. He had helped in binding the planks, and in guiding them while they were being hoisted from the first to the second floor of the building in process of construction and where he was at work, and when the load was in place and being raised, he was called by a fellow servant to come to the second floor and help to unload it. In order to pass from one floor to the other, it was necessary to use one of two ladders that were presumably in position at the south end of the opening between the floors, although spoken of in the report as at the south end of the “load.” At this time he was at the north end of the opening or of the load, which had been raised to the height of about eight feet, and as he passed under it, on his way to the ladder, the hook or claw of the hoisting chain gave way and the planks fell, causing his injuries and death.

The work was being done under the direction and in the presence of the foreman of the defendants, who previously to the accident had told the plaintiff’s intestate “ always to keep out from under the load,” and “never go under the load” ; and the uncontradieted evidence shows that the prosecution of the work did. not require him to pass under the planks, and that either ladder was accessible by a way that did not necessitate his exposure to the possibility of personal injury. ■ .

Upon these facts it is clear that he was not obliged, in the discharge of his duties, to put himself in a place of obvious danger, while passing from where he stood, at the time he was called, to the ladder that led to the second floor, when he must have kno,wn that the load was suspended above him, and must have realized, as a matter of common prudence, that to stand or to pass under it might be attended with danger.

In addition to what his own sense of due care should have suggested, he had been warned that in doing his work he should *269not put liimself in the situation he was in when injured, and whether it be put on the ground of negligence on his part or on that of assumption of risk, it must be held that, in deliberately placing himself in the position in which he was hurt, he either was careless or took the chance of what finally happened.

The plaintiff, to meet this aspect of the case, contends that it cannot be said, as matter of law, that for a workman, while attending to the duties of his employment and in the prosecution of his work, to stand or be where a suspended body or weight may fall upon him, is negligence. And it has been so decided. Spicer v. South Boston Iron Co. 138 Mass. 426. Graham v. Badger, 164 Mass. 42. Haskell v. Cape Ann Anchor Works, 178 Mass. 485.

But there is a distinct difference in principle between a case where a servant, in the discharge of his duty of service and using the ways, works and machinery furnished him by the master, is obliged to pass and repass under objects that are being made or used in the business and which may fall upon and injure him, and the case at bar, where the employee could do his work in his own way and was not oblige<], while in its performance, to expose himself to such risks. Lynch v. Allyn, 160 Mass. 248, 253. Kilroy v. Foss, 161 Mass. 138.

As the ruling on this part of the case was right it is enough to support the verdict, and no useful purpose would be served by a discussion of the other important questions disclosed by the record and argued at the bar.

Verdict for the defendants to stand.