Court Opinion

ID: 6736651
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 23:18:58.873398+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:01:48.414235
License: Public Domain

Burke, J.
Hpon the 4th of June, 1909, plaintiff was a common laborer working for the defendant, a corporation engaged in contracting and building. James Dinnie was general manager, and one Morrow foreman, for said defendant. After dinner of said day, Dinnie and Morrow took a cement crew to some lots owned by the Elks, in Grand Forks, North Dakota, prepared to erect the concrete walls of a basement thereon. The only work done upon such lots was the excavating for the basement and the digging of a trench around the sides thereof for the foundations of the basement walls. The two jobs of digging had been done in separate contracts and at different times, and by different contractors than defendant. The basement proper had been dug first, some time in the fore part of April, and was something over 10 feet deep, and the walls had not been supported in any manner to prevent a cave in. During the time the wall stood unprotected, a great deal of rain had fallen, but the basement had been kept reasonably dry by pumping the water out. Defendant was to do the concrete work upon the walls only, and such walls were to be some 18 inches thick in the main, but the bottom thereof was in the nature of a subwall or foundation, some 4 feet thick and some 18 inches in height. To re*379ceive this base, a trench was dug around the edge of the basement proper, 4 feet wide and 18 inches deep. Fluid concrete would be poured into this trench until it was full, and thereafter brick walls would be built. This trench was not quite completed when Dinnie .and his men arrived, but enough of it was ready so they could commence with the concrete work. Dinnie went with a buggy to a differ•ent part of the city, where plaintiff was engaged in tearing up board .sidewalks, and took him to the Elks’ job, where he was put to work laying planks on the edge of the trench above mentioned, so wheelbarrows with fluid concrete could pass along and fill the trench. In laying the plankway, plaintiff encountered some loose dirt thrown out of the trenches. This dirt he proceeded to shovel further into the basement, so his planks might lie upon the solid dirt of the basement floor. "While so engaged, he stood in the trench with his back to the wall, and while so standing about half a load of dirt slid out of the wall over his head, and fell around and upon him, but did him no injury. He looked .at the source of the slide, and saw Dinnie upon the surface of the ground, also watching the slide. He asked Dinnie if the wall was .safe, and Dinnie replied: . “It is just a little loosened up from the rains; all went down that is going down. Go ahead and go to work. We want to get that machine working.” Plaintiff resumed work, and was injured some ten minutes later by a large slide of dirt from the ■same place. He sued, and recovered a verdict of $5,265. It is stipulated that this verdict is not excessive, and defendant, who appeals, does not want a new trial. The only error complained of is the refusal ■of the trial court to direct a verdict in favor of the defendant at the ■close of the testimony, or to grant judgment in their favor, notwithstanding the verdict. Defendant claims that no actionable negligence .has been shown against it, and if there has plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, and that he assumed the risk of the work in which he was engaged.
1. Upon the first proposition, it will be remembered that Dinnie was the general manager of the corporation. He was the managing -officer, and acted for the defendant in furnishing a place for plaintiff to work. He was thus a vice principal, and not a fellow servant. His negligence was the negligence of the corporation. Mast v. Kern, 34 Or. 247, 54 Pac. 950, 75 Am. St. Rep. 580, note, p. 584. His testi*380mony shows that he was forty-five years of age, and had been for more-than twenty years engaged in similar work in Grand Forks, and was in every way familiar with the nature of the work. He was an experienced builder and contractor. He had examined the basement the day before carefully, with a view to beginning work the next day. He had measured the basement and marked the place for the walls. He had .noticed then that there had been several slides, and had talked with others about it. He knew that the walls had stood unprotected some two-months. He had found that the basement was too short, and had ordered it lengthened, and must have known, as the jury found, that this lengthening would be done by digging under the walls while preparing-the trenches. He knew of the heavy rains that had fallen. He had stood upon the ground above, and had seen the first slide strike plaintiff, and had advised him that the wall was safe. He knew that plaintiff had been taken from a' different part of the city, not an hour before, and rushed into the basement to work, without any opportunity to examine the safety of the walls. He says that the walls might have been made safe with little expense by throwing down into the basement any unsound portions of the walls. He had the authority to put one of the men at work doing this very thing. Notwithstanding all this, he assured plaintiff that the wall was safe, and told him to hurry up and go to work. This court is not called upon to weigh the evidence. This was a case for the jury, and if there was any competent evidence showing negligence upon the part of the defendant it was proper for the trial court to submit the question to them. We have no hesitancy in saying that there was sufficient evidence to warrant the case being so submitted. Umsted v. Colgate Farmers’ Elevator Co. 18 N. D. 309, 122 N. W. 390.
2. Taking up the question of contributory negligence, we are bound by the same rules. The question whether the plaintiff was negligent, and whether his negligence contributed to his injury, is always a question for the jury, if there is any evidence reasonably in conflict thereon. The facts already show that this plaintiff knew none of the things that Dinnie knew, excepting that the dirt fell upon him, and what he could see with his eyes. He did not know how long the walls íiad stood. He did not know that cracks had appeared in the surface of the wall over his head. He had never seen the basement until an hour earlier *381in the day. He had no authority to make the walls safe by bracing them <or shoveling the dirt down. There was sufficient conflict in the matter to necessitate its submission to the jury.
The same question can be made to the contention that the plaintiff .assumed the risk of his employment. He cannot be said to have assumed the risks of which he knew nothing. The risks from the long •standing of the walls, from their being undermined to receive the base ■of the cement wall, and from the negligence of the general manager, he did not assume, because he did not know of them, and they are not incidental to that class of work. Upon proper instructions, the jury returned a positive finding that Dinnie knew, or should have known, that the walls were unsafe. They further found that the walls had been undermined some 8 inches at the place of the slide, to accommodate the base of the cement wall. The jury also found that the wall could have been made safe by bracing it up, and that such would not have hindered the workmen in erecting the wall. There 'is evidence supporting each •of these findings, and, holding as we do that the case was one for the jury, it follows that the judgment must be affirmed.