Armour v. Brazeau

Mr. Justice Wirdes

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellants claim, first, that the allegations of the declaration were not proved; second, that there was error in rulings on instructions; and third, that the verdict is excessive.

In substance the evidence shows that plaintiff and several other men were ordered to whitewash a ceiling in a building of defendants, and to use certain two-inch planks for the purpose of constructing a scaffold about twelve to fifteen feet from the floor, on which the men were to stand while doing the whitewashing. These two-inch planks had been used for a like purpose in another building of defendants, and were covered with whitewash. Under orders to use these planks by one Gallagher, a foreman of defendants, plaintiff, with the other men, took two of said planks about twelve inches wide and sixteen feet in length, and constructed a scaffold by placing them on two beams over which the ends of the planks extended about two feet. Plaintiff and two other men got upon this scaffold and were proceeding with their work, when, within a few minutes, one of the planks broke, the men fell to the floor below, and plaintiff’s leg was broken by the fall and he received other injuries. The broken plank had a knot in it at the place where the break was, which extended about three-quarters across the plank in a diagonal direction, and could have been discovered by a careful examination, notwithstanding the whitewash on the plank.

There is a conflict in the evidence as to whether Gallagher was defendants’ foreman and had charge of plaintiff and his fellow-workmen or not, and also as to whether he gave plaintiff and the other men any order to use the planks in question. That Gallagher was foreman is testified to by plaintiff and two of his witnesses, who were working with plaintiff at the time, but it is denied by Gallagher, and Brown, the master mechanic of defendants, who testified that Tie had charge of the men.

As to the other question plaintiff testified that he and his fellow-workmen were directed by Gallagher to use the planks in question to construct the scaffold, and that Gallagher ordered him to take one of the planks of which the scaffold was made, and that he, with the assistance of one De Mars, took that plank; also that after the scaffold had been completed, “ Gallagher said those boards were all right, to go to work on top of them.” His testimony is corroborated by his witness Gunner, who was with him at the time, though the latter witness says on cross-examination that all the men talked about it and agreed they would go and get the two-inch planks, because they were better to use in that room than certain three-inch planks which they had used in another room. He also testified that he and Gouchman, who assisted him, tested, by springing it, the plank which they took and which was used in the scaffold. The witness Couch man also corroborated plaintiff as to the orders of Gallagher to take and use the planks in question, though he also says that all the men agreed that the two-inch planks would be better to use in that room, which was full of electric wires and machinery, than the three-inch planks, which they had previously used in another room. Gallagher denies that he gave any directions to plaintiff and the other men, but says that he merely assented to their proposition to use the two-inch planks, and he is corroborated by De Mars. No other witnesses testified on the subject.

In view of this conflict on both these questions, it was for the jury to determine with which side was the truth, and from a careful examination of the evidence we can not say that their determination in favor of the plaintiff can be said to be manifestly against the evidence.

It appears from the evidence of all the witnesses who testified on the subject, including Gallagher, that the two-inch planks were covered by whitewash and had previously been used by defendants in another building for like purposes for which plaintiff and his fellow-workmen were using them.

If, then, Gállagher was in fact the foreman of defendants in charge of plaintiff and the others working with him, and in fact ordered them to use the planks in question, and they did so, defendants are, notwithstanding appellants’ claim that the negligence, if any, was of plaintiff’s fellow-servants, responsible to plaintiff in this action, unless plaintiff failed to exercise ordinary care for his own safety, or the defect in the plank should have been known to him, and the danger of its use so apparent that no man of ordinary prudence would have incurred the risk. There is no claim that plaintiff in fact knew of the defect. The planks were covered with whitewash and had been used for a like purpose by defendants, as plaintiff knew. He was not bound under the circumstances to make a critical examination for defects—had the right to assume that the planks were reasonably safe for use or he would not have been ordered to use them by Gallagher—and we therefore think the jurv were justified in finding that he exercised ordinary care. These being our views we deem it unnecessary to consider the argument of appellants’ counsel, that the allegation that defendants furnished the defective plank is not established by the evidence to the.effect that it had been provided by the defendants for use, generally, in such use as it was being put to at the time of the accident.

From a careful reading of appellants’ argument as to plaintiff’s instruction given, we think there was no error in giving it. There was evidence on which to base it, and we see no objection to the principles of law therein announced.

As to instruction 9 requested by defendants, we think it was properly refused. It would seem from the case of Goldie v. Werner, 151 Ill. 551-6, and other cases cited by appellants’ counsel, that it announces a correct rule as to what should be proved by a plaintiff in a case of this kind before he is entitled to a recovery, but we think that under the later rulings of the Supreme Court the third item of this instruction, viz., “ that the plaintiff did not know of such insufficiency, weakness or defect, and that he had no means of knowledge thereof equal to those of the defendants,” is not strictly accurate, at least as applied to this case.

The same author, Wood on Master and Servant, Sec. 376, from which the rule laid down in the Goldie case is taken, says:

“ If the servant, from any source, has the same information that the master has, he is bound to act upon it; but the general statement made in some of the cases, that if the servant has the same means of information that the master has, the latter is excused from liability^, must be taken in a qualified sense, and only applies to information in fact possessed by the servant, or that which is patent and obvious. A servant is not bound to inspect a machine to ascertain whether it is in proper repair or not; nor is he bound to examine a building from time to time to ascertain whether its walls and timbers are sound; but if defects in the machine or in the walls or timbers of a building are obvious, and actually come under his observation, and the defects are such that he knows that it is dangerous to employ them for the purpose for which they are used, and he voluntarily remains, he is taken to have assumed the risks incident thereto. But not only the defects, but the danger must be known to him. If, as'is said in some of the cases, a servant can not recover if he has the same means of information that the master has, he would be bound to look for defects, to inspect the appliances of the business, and would thus be burdened with the duties that legally and properly devolve upon the master, and could seldom recover for injuries resulting from the use of defective machinery. There is no such legal obligation imposed upon him. He is not bound to search for danger, except as to those risks that are patent to ordinary observation; he has a right to rely upon the judgment and discretion of his master, and he will fully perform his duty toward him.”

In Union Show Case Co. v. Blindauer, 175 Ill. 325-7, which was a case of injury from defective machinery of an elevator, the court held that it was not enough to prevent recovery that plaintiff knew of the defect, but that it was thereby rendered unsafe; that “ the dangers must be known to him.” To the same effect is C. & E. I. R. R. Co. v. Knapp, 176 Ill. 127, a case of injury from a defective draw-bar in a freight car; also McGregor v. Reid, 178 Ill. 463, and Ross v. Shanley, 185 Ill. 390-3, in which latter case the injury was caused from defective shoring in a tunnel, which it was claimed the plaintiff knew about as well as his foreman, or could have known by the exercise of ordinary care on his part. The court held that the foreman was charged with a specific duty to exercise ordinary care to see that the place where he sent plaintiff to work was reasonably safe, and that plaintiff was not required to make a critical and careful examination of his surroundings at the place where he was sent to work by the foreman.” From these authorities we think plaintiff might recover although he had equal means of knowledge of the defect in the plank with that of the defendants. He is not bound, as said by Hr. Wood, “to look for defects except such as are patent and obvious, and to inspect the appliances of the business; ” and, as said in the Boss case, he is not required to “ make a critical and careful examination of his surroundings.” These are matters with which defendants were specifically charged, and he had a right to rely upon their doing this duty toward him. He was ordered to use the planks, and after the scaffold was made he was told by the foreman they were all right. His duty was obedience, and the defect and danger therefrom not being patent and obvious, he should not be denied the right of recovery.

The tenth instruction in effect excludes from the consideration of the jury the additional count, and was properly refused. Other instructions requested by defendants were refused, and, we think, properly so, for reasons which sufficiently appear from what has already been said.

We can not accede to appellant’s claim that the damages are so excessive as to justify our interference therewith. Plaintiff’s leg was broken near the ankle, which necessarily caused him much pain and confined him to his home five months, and one of his testicles was injured, as he claims, leaving it in an enlarged and hardened condition, four or five times the natural size, though he did not tell his physician of it at the /time because he says he was bashful and ashamed. The physician says this was chronic at the time plaintiff spoke of it to him, nearly a year after the accident, and that plaintiff then said this injury was caused by his fall. He also says his hearing was injured, and it appears his physician’s bill was about $100.

W e think the judgment should be and it is affirmed.