Court Opinion

ID: 6586232
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:44:11.43358+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:56:58.184986
License: Public Domain

Powers, J.,
dissenting. When the decision in this case was handed down, I announced a dissent on the question of assumption of risk. Since then, I have had an opportunity -to give further study to the case with a transcript of the evidence before me, and I now desire to make my dissent somewhat broader than it was then stated.
In the first place, the case decided by the majority is not the case made by the record. The decision of the majority goes upon the ground, (1) That it was negligence on the part of the defendant to furnish the plaintiff a machine to work with which was without a guard which had been an integral and important part of the machine; and (2) That the plaintiff did not assume the risk of operating the machine in the condition in which it was, because she was ignorant of the fact that there was such an appliance which belonged on the machine.
On both these points the burden of proof was, under our •decisions, on the plaintiff.
I shall not criticise the conclusions of the majority so far as the first point is concerned; but I hssert that its conclusions on the second point are wholly outside the record and unwarranted.
*538I am not going to say that the declaration is. not legally sufficient to cover a case made on the theory that the plaintiff' was relieved from what would otherwise be an assumption of' the risk by the fact that she was ignorant that a guard belonged on the machine; I do say, however, that it is apparent from the-declaration that it was not drawn with any such theory in mind, and it is utterly insufficient to suggest it to the defendant. Nor was the case tried on that theory. Nor was any evidence introduced tending to show that the plaintiff was ignorant off the fact that there was a guard which belonged on the mangle. To be sure, the matter came up at the trial, but it did not result in any evidence on that subject one way or the other getting, into the record, In direct examination the plaintiff was asked this question: “At that time, up to the time you were there, did. you know that there was — don’t answer this until I tell you to— at the time of the injury, and all the time you were there working: in the laundry, did you know that there was a guard rail for this mangle?” This question was never answered. Objection was made, the court sustained the objection, and counsel for the plaintiff withdrew the question. No further attempt to get in evidence on this subject was made. Some evidence was. introduced to show the plaintiff’s knowledge of the machine^ and her ignorance of the dangers, but nothing having a legal tendency to establish her ignorance of the guardrail was elicited. The burden of proof was as I have said, on the plaintiff and in the absence, of evidence on this subject she failed to make a case to which the theory of the majority could be applied. She was required to produce evidence having a reasonable tendency to support this issue, and having failed to do so, the case stands for decision precisely as it would if the machine had never had a guardrail.
The caution -given the witness in the question,- — not to answer until told — shows that counsel had a pretty definite idea that the evidence was not proper, and his prompt withdrawal of the question when it was 'objected to strongly indicates that such idea amounted to full conviction. But turning to the charge, I find abundant confirmation of my statement that the case was tried below without evidence or claim that the plaintiff was ignorant of the guardrail. For the court, time *539and again, told the jury that the plaintiff must take the machine as it was, and if she appreciated its dangers she assumed the-risk. The court called attention to the fact that a guard had been taken off this machine, but said not a word on the subject of the plaintiff’s knowledge or ignorance of this fact. At the close of the charge, counsel for the plaintiff excepted to what the court had said as to its being obvious to the plaintiff that there was no guardrail on the machine, saying: “We claim, she did not have knowledge enough of the machine to ever know there was such. a thing.” And again, her counsel excepted to what the court said about the servant’s knowledge of the master’s neglect as to the guard-rail, saying: “We claim that is improper as there is no evidence that she knew anything about a guardrail.” And yet again, counsel excepted to what the court said to the effect that she was bound to know what was obvious as to the guard-rail, saying: “We claim that her knowledge of the machine was not sufficient, that she was not employed originally as a mangier.” But no claim of this kind had been previously made and there was no evidence-to support it, so the court very properly refrained from modifying the charge in respect of these matters. This is of especial significance as the record shows that the court gave a supplemental charge covering various matters to which counsel called its attention, and that the jury came in three times for instructions and that on each occasion the court recharged them covering substantially the whole case, yet made no allusion to the plaintiff’s ignorance of the guard, nor did counsel make further mention of the matter. So I say that the case presented was that of the ordinary unguarded mangle, in the hands of a mature,, intelligent and experienced operator, to whom the conditions and dangers, not only ought to have been, but actually were fully understood and appreciated. The plaintiff made a feeble —I might say pitiful — attempt to deny knowledge, but the-cross-examination left nothing worthy of submission to the jury on this subject. To say that one who testifies in general terms that she did not know the dangers of a machine and then admits-that she knew each one of them when categorically asked about them, could go to the jury on the question, would be to announce-a proposition altogether too pregnant with danger.
*540Taking the case as it was decided, I wish to make clear at the outset just where I part company with the majority; They say that before a servant can be held to assume the risk he must know of the defect as well as the danger. And when they use the word “defect” they mean a condition existing throhgh the negligence of the master. So, in the view of the majority, it comes to this: A servant must know that the physical condition which is presented to him is one which would not exist if the master had discharged his duty toward him; 'that his master has neglected a duty owed him; that the risk involved is one which the law puts upon the master; and that if he continues in the work the law will shift the risk on to himself.
The rule I stand for is this: If a servant knows the physical conditions that are presented to him, and appreciates just how those conditions affect his safety in the prosecution of his work, and voluntarily continues in the service, he assumes the risks, whatever they are and however occasioned. Various cases from other jusridictions are referred to by the majority as .sustaining their view. As briefly as possible, I wish to examine these cases:
Chicago, etc. Ry. Co. v. Prescott, 8 C. C. A. 109, 59 Fed. 237, 23 L. R. A. 654. It is true that in the course of his opinion 'the District Judge says what the majority accuse him of saying; but immediately following the statement quoted, and only .separated therefrom by a period, he continues: “It is no doubt true, as a general proposition, that a person is not entitled to claim compensation for an injury which he has sustained by voluntarily encountering a known danger, which there was no •occasion to encounter and that might as well have been avoided.” It is apparent that there was no intention of announcing any such proposition as is embodied in the majority opinion. All that is said on this subject, however, is of no consequence, for the case was that of a person injured while attempting to cross a railroad track, and not a master and servant case at all. And, as the District Judge well says, when he was talking about the doctrine of assumption of risk, he was talking about something that did not concern the case; or, to use his own language: “With reference to the further contention of counsel — that the plaintiff voluntarily assumed the risk of crossing the tracks, *541and should be precluded from recovering on that ground — it seems sufficient to say that the rule involved has no application to the present case.”
National Steel Co. v. Hore, 155 Fed. 62. It is true that Judge Lurton uses the word “negligence” as shown in the quotation in the majority opinion. But the case decides nothing of the kind. It was made to turn wholly on the plaintiff's-knowledge of the danger. The allegation which was wanting in the petition, as the court indicates, is that the plaintiff was-“ignorant of the danger.” The learned judge says: “To assume as a matter of law that a common laborer, such as Horewas, should have known that there was danger from the facts known to him, is going too far. To determine the effect this-lacks the conditions known to him in producing hazard, ” etc. And again: “Now knowledge of the conditions which surround the-doing of a thing by a workman does not always imply knowledge of the 'dangers which confront him.”
Katalla Co. v. Bones, 186 Fed. 30. This was an action for injuries occasioned by the fall of the hammer of a pile driver. There was no “chock block” on the machine to prevent such: an accident. The case turned on the servant's implied knowledge of the physical situation. The court said: “A prudent person might have gone up and down as he did and his attention not have been attracted to the absence of the block, or the particular condition of the structure at the point where it should have been.”
Washington, etc. R. Co. v. McDade, 135 U. S. 570, 34 L. ed. 235. That the paragraph quoted from this ease, as interpreted by the majority, does not correctly represent the law of the case becomes perfectly apparent when the whole caséis examined. The injury involved was received in an attempt to put a belt on to a moving pulley. Three specific instructions, were under review, of which one was as follows: “And (3) assuming that putting on the belt was attended with danger, the question to be determined by the jury was no.t whether-the plaintiff knew of such danger, but whether a man of ordinary care and observation, in his situation would have known it,, as he must be presumed to possess that degree of intelligence;, and that if with such observation and care he would have known. *542the danger, then in putting on the belt he assumed all the risks incident thereto.”
Knowledge of the danger is thus made the test,— not knowledge of how that danger came into existence. No intimation is given that specific knowledge of the master’s negligence, separate and apart from the dangers arising therefrom, is of ■any importance whatsoever. Yet, this instruction, with others was approved by the court in the following language: “We do not think there was any error in any of these instructions of which the defendant has any right to complain. The propositions contained in them are in strict accord with the principles laid down by the decisions of this court.” True it is that in the course of the argument, the court speaks of the servant’s knowledge of the defect in the machinery, but it is apparent that it means no more thereby than the physical conditions which caused the injury. No suggestion is made that the servant must know that this condition arose from the master’s negligence. This is the language of the court: “Upon every question in the case— the safety or unsafety of the machinery, the ignorance on the part of the plaintiff of the danger of it, and the negligence of the plaintiff at the time of the accident — - the evidence was controverted,” and so made a case for the jury. Could the issues involved be more plainly stated? Is it not perfectly plain that the assumption of the risk was made to ■depend upon the servant’s knowledge of the danger, alone?
Choctaw, etc. R. Co. v. McDade, 191 U. S. 64, 48 L. ed. 96. The majority place much reliance on this case; it is said that it •contains a statement of the law “so full and exact as to challenge criticism.” McDade, a brakeman, was killed by coming in contact with a water-spout while passing it on a freight car. 'The negligence of the master consisted in maintaining the spout ;so near the track and in such a position as to endanger a man riding on the top of a freight car. An instruction was under review, the exact language of which is not shown, but which, in the language of the court, “ did not permit of recovery if he [McDade] either knew of the danger of collision with the waterspout, or, by the observation of ordinary care upon his part, ought to have known of it. ” This last clause was said to be too favorable to the defendant, but otherwise the instruc*543tion was approved. That the court used the word “defect” to mean only the physical condition which caused the accident without regard to how it was caused, could not be plainer. Suppose McDade had known the spout was there, and understood and appreciated just how its presence affected his safety when riding by it, and he had chosen to ride by it as he did, can there be any doubt that he would have assumed the risk?
That the law of the Federal Supreme Court is not with the majority seems to be put beyond controversy by Butler v. Frazee, 211 U. S. 459, 53 L. ed. 281, from which the rule laid down in Frazee v. Blanchard, 83 Vt. 136, with only slight verbal changes, is borrowed. I quote Mr. Justice Moody: “One who understands and appreciates the permanent conditions of machinery, premises, and the like, and the danger which arises therefrom, or, by the reasonable use of his senses, having in view his age, intelligence and experience, ought to have understood and appreciated them, and voluntarily undertakes to work under those conditions and to expose himself to those dangers, cannot recover against his employer for the resulting injuries. Upon that state of facts the law declares that he assumes the risk. ”
Rummel v. Dilworth, Porter & Co., 131 Pa. St. 509, 17 Am. St. Rep. 827. The majority’s quotation from this case is incomplete and stops in the middle of a sentence. That the true meaning of the court may appear, I quote the whole passage: “He certainly has the right to expect his employer to provide machinery, tools and appliances that are reasonably safe for his use, and he assumes no risks growing out of their defective character, unless he has been fully advised that they are defective and dangerous. He has a right to suppose that his employer has provided such guards and means of protection from injury in the use of machinery, tools, and appliances as .are usual and reasonably necessary for his safety; and he cannot Re held to assume the risks attendant upon their absence, unless such absence is apparent, or his attention has been called to it. If the business is one with which he is not familiar, he has a right to expect that its dangers will be pointed out toüiim, and that he will be instructed in those things necessary for him 4o know in order to his own safety. He cannot be held to assume *544the risks of dangers of the existence of which he has no knowledge. ” Further on in the opinion it is said: “In view of the youth and want of experience in the business on the part of Hummel, it was necessarily a question for the jury whether hi& employer had sufficiently warned and instructed him about the dangers of the employment, and how to avoid them, or had done all that was reasonably necessary to protect him from injury.” I respectfully submit that this case is not an authority for the majority.
Bartholomew v. Kemmerer, (Pa.) 60 Atl. 908. It is a fact that the court quotes with approval in this case the passage from the opinion in the Hummel case which appears in the majority opinion. And it gives a more complete statement of the case of Cargill v. Phil. etc. Co., 39 Atl. 962. Both these cases were mangle cases in which a guard which belonged on the machine had been removed by the master. Yet, and this is full of significance, the court does not in either case make allusion to the plaintiff's ignorance of this fact, nor does it in any way treat it as of the slightest consequence. The question of assumption of risk was not raised in the Cargill case; the defendant seems to have been satisfied to rely upon its claim that no negligence had been established; neither the court below, nor does the Chief Justice in his opinion make the slightest allusion to the law of assumption of risk. That I read this case correctly is evident from what is said of it in the Bartholomew case: “This court affirmed the judgment entered on the verdict, thereby holding that the case is for the jury where the evidence-is conflicting as to whether the plaintiff was properly instructed before being placed at work at the mangle, whether the absence of a guard rendered the machine more dangerous, and whether the plaintiff herself was guilty of contributory negligence.” Not a word about the assumption of risk.
Nor was the question of assumption of risk in the Bartholomew case. The opinion recites that counsel for the defendant-in their printed argument say that the question for determination “is solely one of fact, and reduces itself down to whether there was a guard upon the mangle through which the plaintiff was injured.” No defence was made on the ground of assumption of risk, it was simply claimed that the guard was in place. *545This position of the defendant seems easier to understand when we take notice that all the witnesses except the plaintiff testified that the guard was in place. The trial court ruled the case against the plaintiff on the ground of assumption of risk, and this was held error; but not because the plaintiff did not assume* the risk, but because that was not the issue. This' appears; in the closing paragraph of the opinion. After stating just, what the questions were which were determined in the Cargill case as above quoted, namely, .whether the plaintiff was properly instructed, whether the absence of the guard rendered the machine more dangerous, and whether the plaintiff was negligent, the court added: “These were the questions raised in the case at bar, and the learned judge was in error in directing a verdict in favor of the defendant on the ground that the plaintiff assumed the risk of her employment.”
There is nothing decided in these cases which throws any doubt on the rule stated in Bowen v. Penn. R. Co., (Pa.) 68 Atl. 963: “In this state the law is settled that an employee, in accepting the employment, assumes all risks ordinarily incidental thereto, and all other risks open and obvious, the dangerous, character of which he has had opportunity to observe;” Or on the rule stated in Nuss v. Rafsnyder, 178 Pa. 397, 35 AtL 958, and approved in Masterson v. Eldridge, (Pa.) 57 Atl. 515 as follows: “When an employee, after having the opportunity of becoming acquainted with the risks of his situation, accepts-them, he cannot complain if subsequently injured by suck exposure. By contracting for the performance of hazardous-duties, he assumes such risks as are incidental to their discharge* from causes open and obvious, the 'dangerous character of which* causes he has had an opportunity to ascertain;” or on the rule as stated in Wilkinson v. Johns Mfg. Co., 198 Pa. 634: “Witk full knowledge of the nature of his employment and of the appliances used therein, he must be held to have assumed the risk involved in it.”
Duffey v. Consolidated Block Coal Co., 147 Ia. 225, 124 N. W. 609, 30 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1067. This case involved the* law of assumption of risk only as a matter of pleading. It was held that it was an affirmative defence and must be pleaded.. And that, since it was not pleaded, it was not involved in the case-
*546Martin v. Light Co., 131 Ia. 724, 106 N. W. 359, was the same kind of a case. It involved a question of pleading. The remark of the court quoted by the majority was made in discussing the question of pleading. The editorial staff of the West Publishing Company, as shown by the head note in the reporter, understand the court to mean “A servant does not assume risks that arise from negligence of the master, unless they be shown to him or by the use of proper diligence are discernible by him.” But the case is of little consequence here because the substantive law was not under discussion. As the court says: “The defendant’s answer does not, in our .judgment, raise the issue of assumption of risk.”
Tyrrell v. Cain & Co., (Ia.) 128 N. W. 536. This case is -an authority for the theory adopted by the majority, and the •opinion is by Judge McClain, in whose ability and learning I have great confidence. The mangle was being operated in violation of a statute. There is a ringing dissenting opinion by Chief Justice Diemer, who says that the decision is due to a reluctance of the court to decide the real question submitted, which is whether a servant can assume a risk arising from a breach of a statutory duty. On this question, he says the court is hopelessly divided, though he is ready to say (as this Court said in Kilpatrick v. Grand Trunk Ry. Co., 74 Vt. 288) that such a risk could not be assumed. He then goes on to say: “It is not a question whether he knows the law or is familiar with the legal definition of negligence, but rather does he know that in its then condition it is dangerous; and does he know or should he have apprehended the risk to which he is exposed in working with the machine in its then condition.”
Hesse v. Colombus, etc. R. Co., 59 Oh. St. 167, 50 N. E. 355. This case involved only a question of pleading, and is not an authority for the majority since the question was not involved In the case on account of the lack of a proper averment.
Worden v. Grove-Meehan Co., (Conn.) 78 Atl. 422. There is nothing in this case, rightly understood, which affords any support to the theory of the majority. The question under discussion, so far as it related to the case in hand, was purely :a question of pleading. In holding that the defendant and not rthe plaintiff was to establish the assumption of the risk, the *547court used the language quoted by the majority. But it is not all .quoted. The court had just said: “But extraordinary risks, such as are not ordinarily incidents of the employment, are not assumed by the servant. He may, by his conduct, assume them.” Then, having said that the assumption of risk is not imputed to the relationship of the parties or contract of employment, the court goes on to say: “It arises from the fact that the servant knowing of the abnormal risk has willingly encountered it. In the absence of facts showing that he has assumed such a risk, he is not presumed to have done so, and he is not required to allege or prove that he had not assumed them or had no knowledge of them in order to make out a prima fade case.” It is plain enough that the court makes knowledge •of the risk, and not of the fact that it is extraordinary — that is, that it exists through the negligence of the master — the true test.
Elie v. Cowles & Co., (Conn.) 73 Atl. 258. The plaintiff was non-suited at the close of his evidence. The case was one in which the defective machine and the dangers thereof were fully known and appreciated by the plaintiff, and he relied upon a promise to repair to relieve him of the assumption of the risk. The statements in the opinion are to be interpreted in view of the character of the case then in hand. The opinion in the case was filed June 10, 1909, and on July 20, 1909, Girard v. Grosvenordale Co., (Conn.) 73 Atl. 747, was announced in an opinion written by the same judge who wrote the Worden case. The action was for injuries received as a result of running certain pulleys too fast, by reason whereof one •of the pulleys burst, and being thus put out of balance, it tore down the shaft, which finally brought down a counter-shaft which hit the plaintiff and injured him. The plaintiff entered the room after the pulley broke and before the shafting fell, and saw and appreciated the situation and its dangers. He remained ten or twelve minutes, warning others of the danger, before the counter-shaft fell. The court instructed the jury that there was no negligence on the part of the defendant prior to the bursting of the pulley. This left nothing for the plaintiff’s action to stand on, except the conduct of the master after the pulley went to pieces, — that is to say, his negligence *548in failing to stop the machinery. It appeared that the defendant had, in fact, taken steps to shut it down, but it did not appear that the plaintiff knew this. The case was reversed on account of inconsistent instructions, which allowed a recovery though plaintiff assumed the risk; among other things the court said: “So far as these assignments have been pursued in argument, they revolve around the question, already considered, whether the plaintiff could assume a risk of injury resulting from the defendant’s negligence. That he could do this is unquestionable; whether he did or not was, upon the evidence and claims of the parties, a question of fact for the jury, and could not properly be taken from them by the court, as it was requested to do by the defendant. ” Whether this holding can be sustained on any ground, I do not stop to consider; certainly it could not on the theory of the majority. Remembering that in Connecticut the burden of establishing assumption of risk is on the defendant, it cannot be said that this involves establishing the plaintiff’s knowledge of the defendant’s negligence for it is expressly stated that it did not appear that plaintiff knew what steps the defendant had taken to stop the machinery. So if the law of Connecticut was that the defendant must show, in order to establish assumption of risk, not only that the plaintiff knew the conditions and appreciated the dangers, but also that he knew that these conditions and dangers existed through the defendant’s negligence, the charge would have been harmless, for the defendant had failed in the proof, and as plaintiff claimed, the doctrine of assumption of risk was out of the case. The case is conclusive that by the law of Connecticut, knowledge and appreciation of conditions and dangers are sufficient to charge a servant with the assumption of the risk. But if any further evidence regarding the rule in Connecticut were needed, reference might be had to Tenney v. Baird Machine Co., (Conn.) 82 Atl. 639, which has just come to hand, wherein it is said: “It thus appears that he knew and appreciated the risks which he encountered in this, which was his ordinary employment, and he must be held to have assumed them.”
Leary v. B. & A. R. Co., 137 Mass. 580, 2 N. E. 115. Although it is true that the court used the language quoted by the majority, the result of the case shows that the true meaning *549of the court is not that which is claimed for it. It was the case of one who fell or was thrown while attempting to get off a moving engine. The trial court held that he could not recover, and this was affirmed, on the ground that “no fault or negligence was shown on the part of the defendant. It was said that the danger was known to the plaintiff, and nothing is said regarding his knowledge of any negligence on the part of the defendant which produced that danger.
O’Toole v. N. E. Gas & Coke Co., 201 Mass 126, 87 N. E. 608. There is little consolation to one adhering to the theory of the majority in a study of this case. The true meaning of the court’s language is too plain to be mistaken. O’Toole did not know of the defect, that is to say, he did not know the physical condition of the wheelbarrow. He did not know that one leg was shorter than the other. That the court did not mean more than this, is apparent from this expression in the opinion: “A plaintiff may be precluded from recovery if he appreciates the character and extent of the danger, although he fails to understand the precise manifestation of it, which causes his injury, but he cannot be so precluded, unless he understands the nature and degree of the risk to which he is subjected.”
There is little need of being in doubt as to the law of Massachusetts on this subject. It is thus stated in Myers v. Hudson Iron Co., 150 Mass. 125: “The risk of the safety of machinery is not assumed by an employee, unless he knows the danger, or unless it is so obvious that he will be presumed to know it. He takes the risk of known or obvious dangers, and not of others.” It is thus stated in Anderson v. Clark, 155 Mass. 368: “A person cannot be said to take a risk unless he knows, not only the condition of things, but also that danger exists in such condition. If, however, the danger is obvious, knowledge of the condition of things need only be shown.” This rule, by the way, was quoted and approved in Berming v. Medart, 56 Mo. App. 443. It is thus stated in Connolly v. Eldredge, 160 Mass. 566, by Judge Holmes: “The danger to fingers from two cylinders in contact with each other, and seen to be revolving inwardly, is obvious to any person of ordinary powers, and plainly was understood by the plaintiff.” And further: “If *550there had been no guard across the shelf of the mangle,, the plaintiff would have acted at her peril.”
It is thus stated in Glass v. Hazen Confectionery Co., (Mass.) 97 N. E. 627: “A guard may have been reasonably necessary to insure a safe machine. See Wheeler v. Wason Mfg. Co., 135 Mass. 294. But the judge carefully instructed the jury in this connection that if the risk or danger was obvious — as the absence of a guard would be — there was no liability on the part of the defendant for using this machine and it was not bound to provide a different or safer one.”
Klofski v. Railroad Supply Co., 235 Ill. 146, 85 N. E. 274, It is apparent from a reading of this case that the rule contended for by the majority is not the rule of the Illinois court. For it is said in this very case': “If the servant has, or by the exercise of reasonable care would have knowledge of the existence of a particular danger, and continues in the employment without complaint, he will be deemed to have assumed the danger; and in respect to such dangers, it is wholly immaterial whether they arise from the negligence of the master or from other causes.”
Browne v. Siegel, Cooper & Co., 191 Ill. 226, 60 N. E. 815. It is said by the majority that the Klofski case follows this case and a quotation from the opinion is given to the effect that the servant must know of the defects before he can be held to have assumed the risk. The trouble is, too little is quoted to show the true meaning of the word's of the court. The court goes on to say: “The servant assumes, not only the ordinary risks incident to his employment but also all dangers which are obvious and apparent, and if he voluntarily enters into or continues in the service, knowing or having means of knowing its dangers, he is deemed to' have assumed the risks, and to have waived all claims against the master for damages in case of personal injury.”
Cichowidz v. International Packing Co., 206 Ill. 346, 68 N. E. 1083. This case is cited by the majority as essential to a full statement of the doctrine as understood in Illinois-Here again the majority quote too little. Restoring the sentence quoted by the majority to its place in the opinion and taking it with what should go with it, it appears thus: “And if a servant, knowing the hazards of his employment as the business *551is conducted, is injured while engaged therein, he cannot maintain an action against his master for the injury merely on the ground that there was a safer mode in which the business might have been conducted. A servant who knows that there are dangerous defects,” etc.
I think it is plain from these very cases that the rule in Illinois is the rule I am advocating.
Bloom v. Yellowstone Park Asso., 86 Minn. 237, 9 N. W. 397. I admit that Chief Judge Start uses the word “defects” in defining the law of assumption of risk in this case. That he means anything more than the condition of things, I deny. It was a mangle case as stated, and it was held that the plaintiff had assumed the risk,- — a result that could not have been reached if knowledge of defendant’s negligence had been essential. The rule' of that court is plain enough from Wustilla v. Duluth Lumber Co., (Minn.) 33 N. W. 551, where it is said: “Again, it is one thing to be aware that machinery is defective, or in a particular condition, and another thing to know and appreciate the risks resulting therefrom. A man of ordinary intelligence and experience may know the actual condition of an instrument with which he is working, and yet not know the nature or extent of the risks to which he is exposed. The mere fact that a servant knows the defect does not necessarily charge him with contributory negligence or the assumption of risks growing out of these defects. The question is, did he knów, or ought he, in the exercise of ordinary common sense and prudence, to have known, the risks to which the condition of the instrumentalities exposed him.” It is thus seen that the court semetimes says defects, and sometimes condition-, but it is perfectly apparent that the same thing is meant whichever word is used. Chief Judge Start comes to my aid, in seeking the true meaning of the Minnesota court, in Christianson v. Northwestern Compo-Board Co., (Minn.) 85 N. W. 826, wherein he says: “Now, to charge him with assumption of any risks incident to the condition of the saw which injured him, it is not sufficient that he knew its condition unless he also knew, or in the exercise of ordinary prudence ought to have known and appreciated the risks to which the condition of the saw exposed him in doing the acts he was doing when injured.”
*552St. Louis etc. R. Co. v. Vann, (Ark.) 135 S. W. 816. One meed not go a great ways to find that the Arkansas doctrine is not what the majority claim. The passage quoted from the case named means no more than if it read “it is only where "the servant is aware of the condition and voluntarily exposes himself to the danger that he can be said to have assumed the .risk.” This becomes perfectly apparent when reference is made to the case cited just before the statement quoted by the majority, — C. & G. R. R. Co. v. Jones, 77 Ark. 367, 4 L. R. A. (N. S.) 837. For it is therein said of the servant’s relation to & risk caused by the negligence of the master: “On the other hand, if he realizes the danger, and still elects to go ahead and expose himself to it, then, though he acts with the greatest care, he may, if injured, be held to have assumed the risk.” And again, “As the danger was brought about by the negligence of the foreman, before it can be said, as a matter at law, that plaintiff assumed the risk thereof by the mere fact that, he went ahead with his work, it must be clearly shown that when he did so, he knew and appreciated the danger to which 'he exposed himself by doing the work.” This puts the burden •of proof on to the defendant, but otherwise the rule is the same as our' own. To the same effect is C., R. I. & P. R. Co., v. Grubbs, (Ark.) 134 S. W. 636.
Texas Co. v. Garrett, (Tex. Civ. App.) 134 S. W. 812. The true meaning of this case is mistaken by the majority. Here again the word “defects” is used simply to denote the physical conditions. The case shows it. But if further evidence were .needed reference might be had to Farmers Cotton Oil Co. v. Barnes, (Tex. Civ. App.) 134 S. W. 369, wherein it is said: “We .are aware that the law is well settled that, notwithstanding the servant owes no duty of inspection, yet he cannot shut his eyes to dangers that are obvious to ordinary man, and assumes -the risks of a danger of which he has actual knowledge and of :such hazards as he would have learned by the exercise of that ordinary circumspection which a prudent man would have used in the particular employment.” Again in Lone Star etc. Co. v. Caddell, (Tex. Civ. App.) 134 S. W. 841, it is said: “The servant, in order to be charged with an assumption of the risk upon the ground that he knows of the existence of the defect *553must not only know of the situation, but also of the danger that is likely to result from it.” Citing Railway Co. v. Jones, supra, and 1 Labatt, Mas. & Serv. §296, — wherein it is said, “A man of ordinary intelligence and experience may know the actual condition of an instrument with which he is working and yet not know the nature or extent of the risks to which he is exposed.”
Reference is made by the majority to the doctrine of waiver. Of course there would be no occasion to refer to this if it was not considered to be applicable to the case, and the result of the treatment of this feature of the case by the majority is to commit the Court to the applicability of that doctrine to these cases. In this connection the majority calls attention to the use of the word “waived” in Blanchard v. Vt. Shade Roller Co., 84 Vt. 446. I am ready to admit that the law of waiver is as stated by the majority. But I am not ready to admit that this Court ever intentionally announced the doctrine that it had any place in a negligence case in determining the question of assumption of risk. No such idea was in the mind of the writer of the opinion in the Blanchard case, or any other member of the Court, when it was announced. The term was not used in its legal sense, at all; but only to express the idea that the plaintiff might have so conducted himself as not to be entitled to either protection referred to.
In South Carolina it seems to be held, as stated by the majority, that assumption of risk is in the nature of a waiver. And this term seems to be used in its legal sense. But such is not the law of New York. This appears from the very case cited by the majority, Drake v. Auburn City Ry. Co., (N. Y.) 66 N. E. 121. I quote the paragraph from which the statement in the majority opinion is selected: “The rule of the assumption of obvious risks does not rest wholly upon the implied agreement of the employee, but on an independent act of waiver, evidenced by his continuing in the employment with a full knowledge of all the facts.” Thus it appears that the waiver here spoken of is not the technical waiver — the voluntary relinquishment of a known right — but one evidenced, that is proved, by continuing in the employment with knowledge of the facts. If any doubt of this could exist it would be dispelled by what *554immediately follows what I have quoted. The court proceeds: “In O’Maley v. South Boston Gaslight Co., 158 Mass. 135, 32. N. E. 1119, 47 L. R. A. 161, the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts uses this language: “ The doctrine of the assumption of the risks of his employment by an employee has usually been considered from the point of view of a contract, express or implied; but, as applied to actions of tort for negligence against an employer, it leads up to the broader principle expressed by the maxim, ‘volenti non fit injuria;’ one who knowing and appreciating a danger, and voluntarily assumes the risk of it, has no just cause of complaint against another who is-primarily responsible for the existence of the danger. As between the two, his voluntary assumption of the risk absolves the other from any particular duty to him in that respect, and leaves each to take such chances as exist in the situation, without a right to claim anything from the other. In such a case there is no actionable negligence on the part of him who is primarily responsible for the danger.”
It must be kept in mind all along that whenever the majority uses the word “defect,” it is the equivalent of “a dangerous condition which exists through the negligence of the master.” So to get a full understanding of the majority rule, one should substitute this phrase for the word “defect” therein. That I am correct in this proposition sufficiently appears from the following taken from the majority opinion: “There can be no assumption of risks due to a master's negligence in providing defective machinery, unless the servant knows, or must be taken to know, both of the defect and of the danger attending it. The doctrine is thus stated in Skinner v. C. V. R. R. Co., 73 Vt. 330, 340, where it is said: “If a servant, knowing that the master has neglected his duty and that he is thereby subject to dangers not incident to the employment, continues in the service, etc.’ What “doctrine” is here referred to? Why, the doctrine just stated, of course, that the servant must know of the defect as well as the danger. And by “defect"is meant just what I have pointed out. So there is no escape from this: The doctrine of the majority contains the elements quoted from the Skinner case which I have italicised.
*555Aningenious selection and arrangement of expressions taken from various opinions makes it appear that the doctrine of the majority has been previously announced by this Court. I boldly and confidently assert that this claim is incorrect. Restoring these expressions to the opinions from which they were taken, and reading them in connection with the context shows-that this Court never gave conscious utterance to any such doctrine. The cases follow:
Skinner v. C. V. R. R. Co., 73 Vt. 336. Judge Start is. correctly quoted. But just before the passage quoted by the-majority we find thim saying: “He [the servant] also, in like-manner, assumes risks and dangers attending his service that are known to and comprehended by him, in so far as they would have been known and comprehended by one of his age, experience and capacity.”- What was actually decided in that case is well stated in the head note thereto: “A servant assumes all ordinary risks incident to his employment, and if there are risks, made incident to his employment by his master’s negligence, which the servant knows and comprehends, or ought to know and comprehend, he assumes these also, unless he is-lulled into a sense of security by an express or implied representation of the master.”
This, I insist, is an accurate statement of the law of that case. This head note was written by the same hand that-penned the majority opinion, and I submit that the reporter analyzes the case more accurately than the judge.
It is said that the language taken by the majority from this case is quoted and approved in the third volume of Cooley on Torts. The importance of this should not be magnified. The voice is not the voice of Judge Cooley, but of his editor-judge Cooley, himself, never gave utterance to any such proposition. His rule was this: “The terms in which the proposition has been stated will exempt the master from responsibility-in all cases where the risks were apparent, and were voluntarily assumed by a person capable of understanding and appreciating them.” Cooley, Torts, 551.
Severance v. New England Talc Co., 72 Vt. 181. Themajority quote the last sentence of the opinion. But I cannot believe that this case means what the majority claim for it. What *556¡the Court there refers to is knowledge of the conditions, — not knowledge of how those' conditions came to be. And here again I vouch the head note prepared by the writer of the majority opinion, and insist that it is an accurate statement of the law of the case: “There is no special assumption by a servant ■of a risk due to the master’s negligence, unless the servant knows or ought to know of the unnecessary risk so caused. ” Knowledge of the risk, and not knowledge of its origin or cause, is thus .made to determine.
Johnson v. B. & M. Railroad, 78 Vt. 344. The statement ■selected by the majority is entirely outside of the decision and if it meant just what the majority claim, would be a dictum, only. But I have first-hand information that the opinion was •never intended to proclaim any such theory as is ascribed to it. This appears from the following paragraph, in which, in speaking ■of the negligence relied upon, and the claim that it afforded a basis of recovery, the opinion says: “And so it does, unless, as we have seen, the condition and its dangers were known to and voluntarily incurred.” It is plain enough from the clause “as we have seen” that the expression quoted by the majority and the expression which I quote were intended to mean the same thing. It is equally apparent that at that time, this ■Court, and every member of it except Judge Munson who did ■not sit, understood that if Johnson knew the conditions and their dangers he assumed the risk without regard to whether he knew or was ignorant of how those conditions came to be. This is just what counsel claimed, and just what the reporter covered by his headnote.
Williams v. Norton Bros., 81 Vt. 1. It is true that Judge 'Tyler makes use of the word “defects;” but it is perfectly apparent that he means no more than if he had said: “Whether he had an opportunity to see the condition of the cable or was ■chargeable with knowledge of its condition, were questions for the jury.” Again I call upon the reporter; and I insist that .he correctly interprets the Court when he understands it to say, “whether plaintiff was chargeable with knowledge of the ■danger” was a question properly submitted to the jury.
Vaillancourt v. Grand Trunk Ry. Co., 82 Vt. 416. This ■case is not an authority for the majority opinion when properly *557understood. In order to show this, I quote the whole paragraph from which the majority take a part; the stars take the place-of cases cited: “It is further said that the plaintiff assumed the risk. The risk was not an ordinary one incident to the plaintiff’s employment, for the tendency of the evidence is-that it existed as a result of the negligence of the master'itself. And as an extraordinary risk he did not assume it as a matter of law, since the evidence tends to show that no knowledge of the presence of the clinker was had by him prior to the accident, and whether it was so plainly observable that he will be taken to have known of it and to have comprehended the danger was. clearly for the jury to determine. * * * * Nor in this-respect does the fact that the plaintiff testified to knowledge that, clinkers, big and little, are commonly found around railroad yards and along the track and right of way make any difference-in the absence of actual or implied'knowledge of the particular-defect which caused the accident and a comprehension of the danger attending it.” Is it not plain that the word “defect” is here used to mean merely the presence of the clinker as a part of the physical conditions from which danger arose, without regard to how the clinker got there or why it remained there?' If the plaintiff knew the clinker was there and comprehended and appreciated just how its presence affected his safety in the discharge of his duties, he would, in the absence of anything, to relieve him therefrom, — like being absdrbed in his attempt-to mount the train or something of that kind — assume the risk, though he was ignorant of how it came there, and did not know that it had been there long enough to charge the company with negligence.
Marshal v. Dalton Paper Mills, 82 Vt. 489. I find no support-of the majority opinion in this case. I quote all the Court says-on the subject of assumption of risk, omitting the statement of the claims of counsel: “There was no evidence, however, that grease had ever before accumulated on the running board to such an amount, nor that the plaintiff had reason to believe-it would, nor that he knew it was there on the night of the accident before he was injured. On the other hand, his testimony that he did not know of any trouble with the running board that night was uncontradicted. When before that time there; *558had been a break in the paper during the time the plaintiff was -on duty, or when he had previously been called upon to pass over the running board to or from the wet end of the machine, does not appear. He was working nights only. On that particular night the light in the mill was not good. On the occasion in ■question in going to the wet end of the machine he ran on the floor between the machine and the side of the room. In returning, guiding the paper over and under the driers and felt rolls, necessarily his whole attention was constantly given thereto. He could not look down to see where nor on what he was stepping, without great danger of being caught by and drawn into the machine. The jury found in effect that but for the defendant’s negligence the unsafe condition would not have existed. The risk was therefore not an ordinary one incident to the plaintiff’s employment, but an extraordinary and ■unusual one which he was not in law obliged to anticipate. He ’had a right to assume that the master had used due diligence 'to provide him a’suitable place in which to work, and he did not assume the risk of the master’s negligence in the performance ■of that duty. Upon the facts and circumstances shown we •cannot say as a matter of law that the plaintiff knew of the unsafe condition-, nor that it was so plainly observable that he will be taken to have known of it. The question of the ■assumption of the risk was therefore for the jury.” It is to be observed that the negligence in this case was not simply in the presence of grease on the running board, but in allowing •-it to remain there an unreasonable length of time as was indi•eated by the quantity which had accumulated. Now supposing the plaintiff had known the grease was there, but was ignorant that it had been there so long as to make the master negligent, .and had known just how its presence affected the safety of the place — just how it increased the hazards of his work — is there ■ any doubt that he would have assumed the risk?
The majority says that knowledge of a defect or imperfection, and not merely a dangerous condition, is essential to 'the assumption of the risk is the doctrine of Miner v. Franklin County Telephone Co., 83 Vt. 311. I cannot see it. It is true that the Court in stating the tendency of the evidence several “times uses the word “defect,” but when the rule of law is stated *559it is put in these words: “The plaintiff understood that some of his work would be on poles carrying insulated power wires, and he assumed the risks ordinarily incident to such an employment; but this did not include risks which were due to the defendant’s want of proper care, unless they were risks which he knew and conprehended, or risks so obvious that the law would charge him with knowledge or comprehension.” The “defect” in this case was the lack of insulation at a point on these wires between which Miner attempted to pass. He did not see that the insulation was off, though he looked. Suppose he had seen that the insulation was off; he knew all about the dangers which this condition would present; can it be that he would not have assumed the risk? Suppose these wires were utterly bare, and this for the reason that the master had removed the insulation, and Miner, knowing all about the terrible dangers involved, had attempted to pass between them, —could he be heard to say, “I knew the wires were bare; I knew that it meant serious injury if I touched one of them; but I did not know the company had removed the insulation?” I think not. Knowing the conditions and appreciating the perils would have charged him with the consequences of his attempt to pass between the wires.
Turning, now, from what I insist this Court never intentionally said to what we have said on this important subject, I find that the rule I stand for is by no means unfamiliar.
It was said by Judge Miles in McDuffee’s Admr. v. B. & M. Railroad, 81 Vt. 52, with the approval of every member of this Court as now constituted except Judge Munson, who tried the case below, in speaking of a railroad waterspout maintained too near the track: “If it was one of the ordinary risks incident to his employment, it was assumed when he entered the service of the defendant, and if it was an extraordinary one and which he had had an opportunity to ascertain and in fact ascertained and comprehended its dangerous character, and continued in the defendant’s service after ascertaining that fact, he also assumed that risk; but we think that the risk was not an ordinary nne which he assumed upon entering the defendant’s service. It can well be said of this danger as it was said of a similar structure in the case of Chactaw O. & G. R. R. v. McDade, 191 *560TJ. S. 68; ‘Its maintenance under the circumstances was negligence upon the part of the railroad company.’ Existing as it did through the wrong of the defendant, it was an extraordinary risk and the intestate did not assume it unless he knew and comprehended the danger, or in the circumstances of the case will be taken to have known and comprehended it.”
In Harris v. Bottom, 81 Vt. 346, it was said by Judge Tyler, with the approval of Chief Judge Rowell, and Judges Munson, and Watson, in speaking of a mangle which was without a guard: “The law is- settled that the employee assumes the open and obvious danger incident to the operation of unguarded machinery.” This case approves the rule that a servant assumes no risk caused by his employer’s breach of duty, unless he has knowledge of the dangers thereby caused, and voluntarily continues in the employment; but if with this knowledge he does continue therein, the increased danger becomes an incident of the service which he assumes, and for any injury resulting therefrom, the master is not liable.
It was said by Chief Judge Rowell in Fraser v. Blanchard, 83 Vt. 136, with the approval of every member of this Court, in speaking of the assumption of risk: “But if the conditions are constant and of long standing, and the danger is one that is suggested by the common knowledge of all, and both conditions and the dangers are obvious to the common understanding, and the servant is of full age, intelligent, and of adequate experience, and these elements appear without contradiction, the question becomes one for the court.”
I respectfully insist that the case in hand fulfills every requirement of this rule.
In Kilpatrick v. Grand Trunk Ry. Co., 74 Vt. 288, Judge Stafford, with the approval of Chief Judge Rowell and Judges Munson and Watson, said: “Moreover, one who enters upon a regular employment is presumed to know and appreciate the risks ordinarily incident thereto, and he assumes them. And when, in the course of his employment, a special and obvious risk is presented to him, one not ordinarily incident to the business, he may, as a rule, refuse to accept it, and if he choose to encounter it, he assumes that also.”
*561In Dumas v. Stone, 65 Vt. 442, Chief Judge Rowell, with the approval of Judge Munson, said: “The servant assumes-the usual and ordinary risks incident to the business in which he engages; but he does not assume the unusual and extraordinary risks thereof, unless they are, or ought to have been, known and comprehended by him, in which case he assumes those also, whatever they are. When a servant shows that his injúry was caused by a danger not usually and ordinarily incident to' the business, and which ought not to have existed, and would not have existed had the master preformed his duty to him,, and of which he neither knew nor was negligent in not knowing, the master is liable.”
In Houston v. Brush & Curtis, 66 Vt. 331, Judge Thompson quotes this rule of Dumas v. Stone and says it is correct.
In Dunbar v. C. V. Ry. Co., 79 Vt. 474, Chief Judge Rowell, with the approval of Judges Munson, Watson and Haselton, said: “But the risk was not an ordinary risk, existing without the fault of the defendant, and therefore assumed by the plaintiff; but an extraordinary risk, as it existed by the fault of the defendant, and therefore was not assumed by the plaintiff, unless he knew and comprehended it, or it was so plainly observable that he will be taken to have known and comprehended it.”
In Carbine’s Admr. v. B. & R. R. R. Co., 61 Vt. 348, it-was said by Judge Taft: “But a servant assumes no risk caused by his employer’s breach of duty, unless he has knowledge of the danger thereby caused and voluntarily continues in the employment. If with this knowledge he does continue, the increased danger becomes an incident of the service which he assumes, and for an injury resulting therefrom the master is-not liable. By the acceptance of the service and continuance therein, the servant assumes the hazard incident to obvious- and known dangers.”
In Hatch v. Reynold’s Est., 80 Vt. 294, Chief Judge Rowell, with the approval of Judges Munson and Watson, said: “Suppose the risk to have been extraordinary, which is most favorable to the plaintiff, the burden was on him to show that he did not assume it; and to do that, it was necessary for him to show that he did not know and comprehend and that it was not so> *562plainly observable that the law will charge him with knowing and comprehending it.”
In Bolton v. Ovitt, 80 Vt. 362, Chief Judge Rowell, with the approval of Judges Munson and Watson, said: “When the defendant set the plaintiff to holding the cap with his hand he subjected him to an extraordinary risk, and one that the plaintiff did not assume, unless he knew and comprehended it and how to avoid it, or it was so plainly observable that he will be taken to have known and comprehended it, and how to avoid it; and the burden was on the plaintiff to show non-assumption, we will say for present purposes. But whether he was to be taken to have assumed that risk was an open question, depending upon whether he understood the danger from which his injury resulted.”
In McKane v. Marr & Gordon, 79 Vt. 13, Judge Watson, with the approval of the Chief Judge and another member of this Court, quoted and approved the rule governing the law of assumption of risk as stated in McKane v. Marr & Gordon, 77 Vt. 7, Laflam v. Mississquoi Pulp Co., 74 Vt. 125, and Dumas v. Stone, supra, in each of which knowledge and appreciation of the danger is made the sole determining factor.
In Shattuck’s Admr. v. C. V. Ry. Co., 79 Vt. 469, Chief Judge Rowell, with the approval'of every member of the Court as now constituted, said: “The cáse as presented is one of an extraordinary risk, because existing by the fault of the defendant, and therefore not assumed by the deceased unless he had knowledge of it, actual or imputed.”
It was said by Judge Hall in Place v. Grand Trunk Ry. Co., 80 Vt. 196, with the approval of the Chief Judge and judges Munson and Watson, that an employee “does not assume an extraordinary risk, existing by the fault of his employer, unless he knows and comprehends it, or it was so plainly observable that he will be taken to have known and comprehended it.”
It is said by Chief Judge Rowell in Drown v. N. E. Tel. & Tel. Co., 81 Vt. 358, with the approval of Judges Munson and Watson, in speaking of the assumption of risk: “The case stands on this question as it stood before, when we held that the risk was not ordinary, and therefore assumed by the plaintiff, but extraordinary, and therefore not assumed by him, unless *563he knew and comprehended it, or it was so plainly observable that he would be taken to have known and comprehended it. ”
It is sometimes said that it is better that the law be certain than that it be logical. If this be so, it seems to me that after this proposition for which I contend has thus repeatedly been asserted by this Court it is about time that it should be considered as settled law.
As we have seen, the doctrine announced by the majority is supported only by one or two isolated cases and a few unguarded dicta. Its importance is very far reaching. The result is apparent. At one stroké of the judicial pen the doctrine of assumption of risk as a practical factor in the law of negligence is eliminated forever. For there will never be found a plaintiff so dull as to admit that he knew that the master’s conduct amounted to what the law would hold to be negligence. To require him to know this would be to put upon him the burden of deciding off hand questions which often take this Court a year to decide, ■ — for the only question involved in many of these cases is the very question whether the master has been negligent. It may be that the doctrine of assumption of risk ought to be eliminated from the law, but I submit that it should be done by legislative and not judicial action.
I should reverse the judgment and render judgment for the defendant to recover his costs.