Court Opinion

ID: 8186137
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:08:36.614674+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:25.251944
License: Public Domain

Dodge, J.
1. The duty of a master to his servant is definite and clear. It is to provide him reasonably safe and proper tools, implements, and apparatus with which to work, reasonably competent and careful co-employees, and a reasonably safe place to work. These duties being performed, the result of any accident must be borne by the servant. If he would seek to make the master liable, he must prove an omission or failure in some one of these three respects. The question therefore is whether the evidence in this case,— given all the weight to which in any respect it can be entitled,— did establish any such failure.
There is no claim or suggestion that the machinery or apparatus was defective either in character or repair. There is no suggestion that any of the co-employees were lacking in that character for skill and caution which is required, nor of any lack of care in the defendant or its representative in their selection. It is, however, strenuously argued that there was a failure in the defendant’s duty to make the place of labor safe, in that notice or warning of the starting of the scraper machinery was not given to the plaintiff. The contention of the plaintiff below, and his principal contention in this court, was that the master, recognizing the necessity of providing for such warning as an element of *579safety of place, had employed a man, known as a hatch-tender, for the purpose and with the duty, amongst others, of giving the warning, and whom it thereby constituted its representative or agent to perform the duty of giving warning for it, and that such hatch-tender failed to perform his said duty. He argues that this was a delegation to the hatch-man of a duty resting on the master, and, therefore, that the former’s negligence is imputable to the latter.
This position involves a confusion of ideas. It is undoubtedly true that, 'when the employment is in its nature perilous, it is the duty of the master to provide reasonable and necessary precautions and safeguards against such perils, and that no delegation of that duty can relieve him from responsibility for failure to perform it. If injury to employees is to be apprehended from starting of machinery, or from passage of cars, as in Promer v. M., L. S. & W. R. Co. 90 Wis. 215, and that danger can be avoided by reasonable precautions in the way of warning or otherwise, it may well be the duty of the master to make provision and give direction for such precautions; but, when he does so, he fulfills his duty. If reasonable care would require that a co-employee be provided to give warning, it would be necessary for the master to provide one; but, if he properly selected and instructed a competent man for that purpose, he would no more be responsible for a failure of the warning through negligence of such servant than he would for the results of the negligence in performance of any other duty by a co-employee. That is one of the risks assumed by the other servants. Dahlke v. Illinois S. Co. 100 Wis. 431.
This was the full scope of the decision of this court in Promer v. M., L. S. & W. R. Co., supra. The only point there decided was that the question should have been submitted whether the company had prescribed sufficient regulations to guard against injuries to its employees from moving about cars in its yards. Smith v. C., M. & St. P. R. Co. *58091 Wis. 503, 505. If there is anything in the opinion in that case which can be construed as holding that, after due and sufficient regulation providing for precautions by a fellow-servant, his negligence could impose liability on the employer, such construction is contrary to the well-settled law of this state, and not intended in that case.
The rule on this subject is well expressed and illustrated in Hartvig v. N. P. L. Co. 19 Oreg. 522: “As it.is the duty of the master to furnish a reasonably safe place for his servant to work, it became the duty of the defendant company to provide such reasonable rule or regulation in the conduct of the business as would protect the men while engaged in their work at the foot of the chute. It required the defendant not simply to employ skilful and competent agents and employees in its service, but to adopt rules and regulations adapted to the dangerous nature of the business, so as to guard against accidents; in a word, to be vigilant in the use of means, and in the adoption of measures, to make the servants reasonably safe in their employment. To this extent the master assumes the risks, while the servant assumes the .natural and ordinary risks incident to the business in which he is engaged, including those -arising from the negligence of his fellow-servants.”
The rule here announced does not at all infringe the other well-settled doctrine that in providing the safe place to work, as in building a scaffold or putting in place timbers to which tackle is to be attached (Jarnek v. Manitowoc C. & D. Co. 97 Wis. 537), the duty of the master is satisfied only by actual performance, whether he does the work with his own hands or through servants, even though the latter may also afterwards work with the plaintiff in the service, depending on the safety of such preliminary structures or appliances. See Cadden v. Am. S. B. Co. 88 Wis. 409, 417; Smith v. C., M. & St. P. R. Co. 42 Wis. 520, 526.
In this case there is absolutely no evidence of any lack of *581precautionary regulations prescribed by the defendant; although, if such contention were made, it would be rendered immaterial by the fact, fully apparent, that the conditions were all the usual ones, and the defendant, a man of ten years’, experience in such service, had worked under them from the spring until August, and must be held to have assumed any risk therefrom. The injury in this case resulted, so far as the evidence goes, from the negligence of the scraper-man in starting his machinery without signal from the rigger, with whom plaintiff was working. If, as plaintiff contends, it also resulted from the omission of the hatch-man to give warning, no liability of the defendant results, for the hatch-man, as also the scraper-man, were clearly fellow-servants with plaintiff, all engaged in the common undertaking of unloading the coal from the same boat, and under common direction and command, with no right of control one over the other. Prybilski v. N. W. C. R. Co. 98 Wis. 413; Foley v. The Peninsular, 79 Fed. Rep. 972; Luebke v. C., M. & St. P. R. Co. 63 Wis. 91; Ocean S. S. Co. v. Cheeney, 86 Ga. 278. It should be noted in passing, however, that much which is said as to the giving of no’tice by the hatch-man as a protection to the plaintiff is misleading and confusing. If, as appears to be established by plaintiff’s evidence, the scraper-man started his machinery without a signal, no hatch-man, however vigilant, could give any effective warning. The pressing of the lever by the scraper-man, and the start, ing' of the rope, to the injury of plaintiff, were necessarily instantaneous. No observation by the man at the hatch could be communicated to the man in the hold so quickly as the motion was communicated to the rope. No matter what duties the hatch-man may have had to give warning of danger, they could have no application to a danger like this, the effect of which, in the nature of things, was as instantaneous as his earliest possible discovery of it.
2. Error is alleged because the court, upon motion to di*582rect a verdict for defendant, first• announced, “Nonsuit granted,” and then withdrew that decision and directed a verd ict. This was done practically at on ce, before any change in the situation of the parties had taken place, and before the jury had been discharged. True, the noon recess had intervened, but nothing else. We can see no error in this. Surely, a moment for loons poanitentice must be allowed courts. It certainly cannot be held that the moment a judge announces a conclusion he is at once foreclosed from any further consideration. Nothing is more common than for counsel to suggest impropriety of some order or decision Avhen announced, and for the judge to modify it. It would have been entirely competent for the court, after announcing the granting of nonsuit, to have changed his mind, either on a reason suggested by counsel or one occurring to himself, and to have then submitted the case to the jury.
3. Numerous exceptions to exclusion of questions on cross-examination have been pressed upon our attention as errors. We have examined them all carefully, and, while in one or two instances the restrictions on plaintiff’s cross-examination were somewhat severe, we do not think the discretion of the superior court was abused. Most of the excluded questions related to matters already fully covered by the cross-examinations. Others merely inquired whether the witness had already testified to certain facts. Still others were so worded that a direct answer would be capable of misconstruction. A question to Anderson, the hatch-man, as to whether he could have seen a signal if given, might have been permitted, but its exclusion could not prejudice plaintiff. He-had testified that he saw none, and, if his failure was due to his negligence, that could not promote plaintiff’s case.
We discover no prejudicial error, and no evidence tending to prove negligence of defendant.
By the Court.— Judgment affirmed.
BaRdeeet, J., took no part.