Court Opinion

ID: 8773962
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 12:54:45.279677+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:02:25.027963
License: Public Domain

LOWELL, Circuit Judge.
The defendant in error, hereinafter called the plaintiff, sued the plaintiffs, in error, hereinafter called the defendants, to recover damages for being hit with a stone fired negligently from a blast. At the-trial the defendants requested the learned judge to instruct the jury to return a verdict for them, on the ground that the negligence charged against them was that of their employé, the plaintiff’s fellow servant. The request was refused and the defendants duly excepted. The plaintiff admitted that, this employé, who set off the blast, and whose negligence the plaintiff relied upon, was the plaintiff’s fellow servant, provided only that the plaintiff himself was in the defendants’ employ at the time of the accident. There was evidence of this man’s negligence. The learned judge submitted to the jury the question of 'the plaintiff’s employment, under instructions not objected to except as above stated. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff, and the defendants have brought the case to this court. The only assignment of error relied upon at the alignment concerned the plaintiff’s own employment at the time of the accident. The circumstances were not in dispute.
The plaintiff was a hod carrier working for the defendants at a daily wage. His day’s labor was over at 5 o’clock, and at that time the’ “boss” called to the men to- quit work. The plaintiff remained a few minutes, and, by order of the boss, covered with a cloth the masonry laid that day. He then descended the ladder from the building to the ground, and went to a shed, where .he had hung up bis coat before going to work that afternoon. This shed was not on the path leading directly from the building to the entrance of the lot on which the building stood. When the plaintiff reached the shed he found its door locked, and asked the boss carpenter to open it. With him the plaintiff went on still further to the defendants’ office, where the boss carpenter told the timekeeper to give the key to the plaintiff, and told the plaintiff to bring back the key to the office after getting his coat. The plaintiff returned to the shed, where he met the night watchman. The latter was unlocking the door when the blast was blown, and a piece of rock hit the plaintiff, breaking- his leg. The defendants contended that, as the facts were not in dispute, the court should itself have determined that the plaintiff was in the defendants’ employ at the time of the accident. If there was evidence which warranted a finding that the plaintiff had already quitted the defendants’ employment for the rest of the day, the verdict must stand.
The cases hold generally that a workman’s employment does not cease at the instant his work time is over, that employment includes the incidents of employment, and that the workman is still his master’s servant while he is gathering up his tools and adjusting his clothes after the day’s work, and is leaving the place of his employment. Olsen v. Andrews, 168 Mass. 261, 47 N. E. 90; O’Neil v. Pittsburg R. R. (C. C.) 130 Fed. 204; Manville v. Cleveland & T. R. R., 11 Ohio St. 417; Ewald v. C. & N. W. R. R., 70 Wis. 420, 36 N. W. 12, 591, 5 Am. St. Rep. 178; Int. & G. N. R. R. v. Ryan, 82 Tex. 565, 18 S. W. 219; Higgins v. Hannibal & St. R. R., 36 Mo. 418, 432, the last being an extreme case. In Farwell v. B. & W. R. R., 4 Metc. 49, 38 *3Am. Dec. 339, which Sir Frederick^Pollock calls the fountain head of later decisions concerning- the doctrine -of common employment that doctrine is rested upon an implied contract between master and servant. Quoting Tunney v. Midland R. R., L. R., 1 C. P. 291, 296, Pollock states the rule of common employment as follows:
“A servant, wlien he engages to serve a master, undertakes, as between himself and his master, to run all the ordinary risks of the service, including the risk of negligence upon the part of a fellow servant when he is acting in the discharge of his duty as servant of him who is the common master of both.” Pollock on Torts (Webb’s Ed.) p. 117.
Is it to he supposed that implied contract and undertaking end suddenly at a fixed minute, while the servant is still surrounded by the conditions and risks of his employment, or that they continue until the servant has ceased to be affected by these conditions and risks? We think the latter conclusion is obviously correct. To adopt the former, whether in favor of the master or of the servant, would deprive the rule of its reason.
In the case at bar the plaintiff, indeed, did not dispute that his employment would have continued until he reached the highway, provided that he had walked there directly from the building. This concession is decisive of the case at bar. If the employment covers, not only the time during which the workman is engaged in his ordinary labor, but also a later time, during which he is passing from the surroundings of his employment into surroundings unrelated thereto, then this additional period will evidently be longer or shorter according to the circumstances. The situation and nature of the building may affect the time needed for leaving it. The tools which the workman uses may be more or less complicated and numerous. They may be easy or hard to put away for the night. That the workman may have to lay aside some of his clothes while working is plain. This may well be both for his employer’s benefit and his own, like the travel in Kilduff v. Boston El. Ry., 195 Mass. 307, 308, 81 N. E. 191, 9 L. R. A. (N. S.) 873. That a proper place should be provided by the employer wherein to keep the clothes, temporarily is reasonable, and that this place cannot always be in direct line between the place of work and the gate of the premises is obvious. If the door of the receptacle is locked— perhaps for the safety of the employé’s property — or if it sticks, or if some time is otherwise spent by the workman in looking for his clothes, this also is an incident of his employment, and the employment ordinarily continues during the operation. The distinction between employment and nonemployment is the same, whether it works in favor of the master or of the servant. In the case at bar the plaintiff is contending that his employment ceased before the accident; but in the next case the employé may be driven to maintain that his employment is prolonged to his final departure from the premises. This happened in Boyle v. Columbian Fire Proofing-Company, 182 Mass. 93, 102, 64 N. E. 726, 730, a suit brought under the employer’s liability act (Act April 22, 1908, c. 149, 35 _Stat. 65 _[U. S. Comp. St. Supp. 1909, p. 1171]). The plaintiff was injured while going down in an elevator at the noon hour to get his dinner, and the court said;
*4“Going from tile particular part of the building where he has been set to work, to eat dinner, is an incident of é workman’s employment who is engaged by the day in erecting the building in question, at least so long as he has not finished passing over or through the building to get his dinner.”
In Rosenbaum v. St Paul R. R., 38 Minn. 173, 174, 36 N. W. 447, 8 Am. St. Rep. 653, the plaintiff contended that he remained an employe while riding back on the defendant’s construction train, after hours, to get the coat which he had left at the place of his work. The contention was sustained. To the same general effect are Arkadelphia Co. v. Smith, 78 Arle. 505, 95 S. W. 800; Brydon v. Stewart, 2 Macq. 30. Many of those cases in which it was held that the plaintiff was not in the defendant’s employ at the time of the accident jret recognize that employment may continue after actual work has ceased. Thus in Fletcher v. Baltimore & Potomac R. R., 168 U. S. 135, 138, 18 Sup. Ct. 35, 36, 42 L. Ed. 411, the Supreme Court observed:
“Tbe plaintiff at the time of the accident had finished his employment for the day, and had left the workshop and grounds of the defendant, and was moving along a public highway in the city with the same rights as any other citizen would have.”
To much the same effect are Baird v. Pettit, 70 Pa. 477, 483; Whitney v. N. Y., N. H. & H. R. R., 102 Fed. 850, 855, 43 C. C. A. 19, 50 L. R. A. 615.
It has often been held that a master is liable for acts of his servant done in the general course of employment, although done for the servant’s individual benefit and not for that of the master. Ritchie v. Waller, 63 Conn. 155, 28 Atl. 29, 27 L. R. A. 161, 38 Am. St. Rep. 361. In the case at bar, as has been said, the plaintiff’s act in seeking his coat may well be deemed done for his master’s benefit as well as for his own, inasmuch as the master’s interest ma3' have required the plaintiff to work without his coat. The ruling of the Circuit Court in the case at bar appears to have been based upon Packet Co. v. McCue, 17 Wall. 508, 21 L. Ed. 705; but upon careful consideration of that case, and of the comment made thereon in Randall v. Baltimore & Ohio R. R., 109 U. S. 478, 3 Sup. Ct. 322, 27 L. Ed. 1003, we are satisfied that the Supreme Court deemed the circumstances there to be exceptional, both in the nature of the plaintiff’s employment and in the manner of its- termination.
In the case at bar there was no evidence which warranted the jury in finding that, at the time of the accident, the plaintiff had quitted the defendants’ emplojc The learned judge was therefore in error in leaving the question of employment to the jury.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed, the verdict set aside, and the case remanded to that court for further proceedings not inconsistent with the opinion passed down the 25th day of February, 1910; and the plaintiffs in error recover their costs of appeal.