Court Opinion

ID: 6428357
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:05:58.828438+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:52:05.422742
License: Public Domain

Barker, J.
We think there was evidence for the jury upon the issue whether the relation of master and servant existed between the plaintiff’s intestate and the defendant who was the owner of the building in which the intestate was employed. According to the defendant’s own testimony he had his own office in the building, furnished materials for keeping it in order and when consulted by the intestate as to what should be done by the latter with the varnish which the defendant owned did not refer him to any one else for directions. The defendant also admitted that at one time he had hired the intestate to finish off some rooms in the upper part of the building. The first lessee testified that the defendant hired the intestate and gave him orders and- paid him, and the boy who was present at the time of the explosion testified that the defendant came down to the basement and directed the intestate to do the work upon which he was engaged when hurt. There was evidence from which the jury could find that that work was not a mere single instance of gratuitous service.
*360The defendant was not shown to have had any knowledge of the qualities of varnish other than that of an owner of houses and buildings in the care and keeping in order of which he had caused varnish to be used. The intestate was a man of mature years having a son who was eleven years of age at the time of the trial. He was a carpenter by trade and had worked for the Norcross concern as well as for others, and there was no dispute but that he had been employed at the building which was a large one comprising a hotel, with stores and offices, for some years as an all round man to make repairs and keep things in order. The plaintiff herself testified that he did “ everything and repairing” around the building, and there was nothing to contradict the testimony of the defendant and of the later lessee that the intestate did painting. But even if the jury should disbelieve that testimony there was nothing to throw doubt upon the fact that the intestate was a carpenter of experience. We think it follows that he must be deemed to have had equal knowledge of the qualities of varnish with that with which the defendant from his own knowledge and experience must be deemed to have had. It was for the plaintiff to produce evidence from which fairly the inference could be drawn that the defendant knew the danger of an explosion while the plaintiff's intestate did not. In our opinion the evidence would justify no such inference. Whether the intestate did painting or not his experience as a carpenter as well as his work as an all round man in the building where he was hurt must have given him as great familiarity with varnish as the defendant’s experience with the care and repair of buildings could give.
The case seems to us one in which all that fairly can be said is that the employer had no more knowledge of the danger and no more opportunity for such knowledge than the servant, and that the servant proceeding under the most general directions to do by himself and in his own time and way a certain work which could have been done with safety and receiving an injury which came from the way which he himself selected, was injured if not by his own negligence, at least without any fault on the part of his employer, so far as fairly could be found from the evidence. If the danger was obvious, one knew it as well as the other. If it was unknown to the intestate the evidence would *361not justify a finding that it was better known to the defendant, or that he had had better opportunity to know it, than his servant.

Exceptions sustained.