Adams v. West Roxbury

1 F. Cas. 152, 1 Hask. 576
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedSeptember 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 F. Cas. 152 (Adams v. West Roxbury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. West Roxbury, 1 F. Cas. 152, 1 Hask. 576 (circtdma 1875).

Opinion

FOX, District Judge.

The plaintiff claims to recover damages in this action for personal injuries of a very serious nature, sustained by him from an explosion of certain electrical exploders which had been obtained by the defendant’s agents, to be tised in blasting with dualin. There is but little controversy as to the material facts. Clement Herschell was one of the superintendents of streets in West Roxbury, in the year 1873, and had the charge of the work of preparing stone to be used in repairing roads. In behalf of the town, he employed in this business various persons, and among others the plaintiff, an engineer, to ran the engine to drive the machinery for crushing the stone, which was first blasted from the ledge. On the afternoon of February 3, Herschell directed the foreman to procure at Neponset some dualin, together with fifty exploders to be used in the blasting. They were obtained by him and brought to the place in a paper box that evening, and put in a chest with the dualin; there being some powder in the chest, the plaintiff put the box which contained the exploders on a shelf in the engine room. They remained there until the next morning, when they were examined by the foreman, and finding that the wires were shorter than he wanted, he, concluding to return them, put them back into the paper box, and while tying the string around it, holding tha box between his knees, an explosion occurred, and thereby the plaintiff, who was standing [153]*153in iront of the foreman, was injured The sight of one of his eyes is nearly destroyed, and he also sustained other damages, and for these injuries, this action was brought, and was tried before me at the last fall term; a verdict was rendered for the defendant, which the plaintiff now moves may be set aside, for alleged erroneous rulings and instructions to the jury.

The principal question in the cause is, what obligations and liabilities did the defendants assume towards the plaintiff in providing materials for the business, he being in their employment at the time as an engineer in charge of the engine, which drove the machinery for crushing the stone after it was blasted from the ledge? The instructions given to the jury declared that it was a matter of care and prudence in providing safe and proper materials, and whether there was any negligence in that behalf, and that the defendants were not to be held responsible for absolute certainty as to their safety. The language of the instructions is as follows: “The defendants were bound to use reasonable care and precaution to proc.vo safe and proper material for the use of their servants, and if from want of such care and precaution, the plaintiff has sustained injury, the defendants are accountable; but If they exercised such care in the selection and procurement of material, they do not become insurers of thé safety of their servants from-injury in using such material. In determining the question of due care, the jury will first determine, whether, under the circumstances, it was proper care and precaution to use electrical exploders in blasting at the time and place contemplated. This involves the propriety of the use of the article for blasting. In deciding upon this point the juiy will determine to what extent these exploders had come into general use at that time, and how far by the persons engaged in the business of blasting they were ordinarily considered a safe and proper article to be used for this purpose, i Vas it negligence and want of due care to use electrical exploders in blasting, or were they proper, fit articles to be so employed? If the jury find that they were generally and ordinarily considered a safe and proper article to be used in blasting, and that there was no negligence or want of due care on the part of the city in their use, then the city was bound to take due care to obtain that kind of exploders which were safe and properly made, and they would have no right to purchase those which were more dangerous and liable to explode, because they could obtain them somewhat cheaper. The more dangerous the instrument employed, the more care should be taken to obtain as safe an article as possible properly manufactured. The jury therefore will determine whether these exploders, Brown’s, were, by the persons accustomed to use exploders and by those engaged in blasting, generally deemed to be a good, safe article of the kind used and manufactured, and as safe as any which could with care be obtained in the market. The jury will also determine what Herschell’s opinion and knowledge was of the nature and character of these exploders, because if they should find that he deemed them unsafe and improper to be used, then it would be negligence and want of due care on his part io provide such material for their use. The negligence of Herschell in this respect, would be the negligence of the town, for which it would be chargeable.” “If the jury find that the defendants were justified in obtaining for the use of their workmen Brown’s exploders, and that those procured were in all respects apparently safe and properly manufactured, but that by reason of some secret unknown defect in one or more of them, which was not discoverable by the most careful examination, they exploded without any known cause, the defendant would not be accountable for the damage occasioned by said explosion. It would be as between these parties a simple accident, for the consequences of which the defendant would not be accountable to the plaintiff. If the jury find it was negligence and want of care on the part of the defendant, either to use electrical exploders at all, or to have procured in the manner they did this particular kind of exploder, the manufacture of Brown, then the defendants are accountable to the plaintiff for the damage occasioned by such negligence. But if on the contrary the jury think there was no want of ordinary care and prudence in procuring in the manner they did, for the use of their workmen, this particular manufacture of exploder, then the plaintiff would fail to establish negligence on the part of ilie defendants, and he cannot sustain his action.”

These instructions held the defendants chargeable with the knowledge of Herschell as to the safety of these exploders, and that if he was guilty of any negligence in relation to them, the defendants would be accountable therefor; that their liability depended entirely on whether due care and precaution had been used in the selection’ and use of the exploders; that the plaintiff could only sustain his action by establishing more or less negligence on the part of the defendant. These instructions are found, on an examination of the authorities, to have their entire support; not one has been met with, in any way in conflict with them.

It is hardly necessary to refer to any of them, and a few only will be presented. Priestley v. Fowler, 3 Mees. & W. 5; Wright v. New York Cent. R. Co., 25 N. Y. 566; Patterson v. Wallace, I Macq. H. L. Cas. 748; Tarrant v. Webb, 18 C. B. 801; Gilman v. Eastern R. Corp., 10 Allen, 238. In which last case It is held that a master is bound to use ordinary care in providing structures and engines, and is liable to any of his servants for his negligence in this regard.

[154]*154In Ford v. Fitchburg R. Co., 110 Mass. 255, the instruction was: “A corporation is required to use due care in supplying and maintaining suitable instrumentalities, for the performance of the work or duty which it requires of its servants, and is liable for damages occasioned by neglect or omission to fulfill this obligation, whether it arises from its own want of care, or that of its agents intrusted with that duty.

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Bluebook (online)
1 F. Cas. 152, 1 Hask. 576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-west-roxbury-circtdma-1875.