Beal v. Bryant

58 A. 428, 99 Me. 112, 1904 Me. LEXIS 53
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJune 7, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 58 A. 428 (Beal v. Bryant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beal v. Bryant, 58 A. 428, 99 Me. 112, 1904 Me. LEXIS 53 (Me. 1904).

Opinion

Negligence. Master and Servant. Duty of master to furnish safe appliances. When this duty may not be delegated. Fellow-Servant.

The plaintiff was injured by the fall of a platform upon which he was at work for the defendants. The defendants knew that certain materials were required with which to secure the platform in place. They themselves had no materials, furnished none, and attempted to furnish none, but expected and intended that the fellow-servants of the plaintiff would use the identical fore throat-halyards of a certain vessel which they did use for that purpose. An examination of the halyards would have revealed the fact that they were old and rotten, unsafe and unsuitable; but no examination was made.

Held; that if the workmen in furnishing these halyards for the use to which they were put acted by the authority of the defendants, they stood in place of the defendants in discharging a duty owed by them to their servants.

Also; this duty, to furnish their servants with safe and suitable materials and appliances with which to perform their work, could not be delegated-so as to relieve the defendants from responsibility for negligence in its peform[113]*113anee to the plaintiff, who had nothing to do with securing the platform and first came to work upon it after it was in place.

In such case, while the men who secured the platform were the fellow-servants of the plaintiff in the use which they made of the halyards after they were furnished, they did not sustain that relation to him in furnishing the halyards.

Action by plaintiff for personal injuries suffered by him, in the defendant’s employ at the defendant’s plant in Rockport, Knox County, May 28, 1902, by the giving way of rope supporting one corner of a coal stage, and his falling into the hold of the vessel then being unloaded.

The case was opened to a jury, and upon the evidence being taken out, on motion of the defendants, the presiding justice instructed the jury to render a verdict for the defendants. The plaintiff took exceptions to this instruction of the court, contending that the case should have been submitted to the jury.

The case appears in the opinion.

Declaration. In a plea of the case,for that heretofore, to wit: — on the 28th day of May, 1902, at said Rockport, to wit: — at said Rock-land, the said defendants were, and for a long time prior thereto had been, and still are engaged in the business of burning lime from lime-rock, and carrying on other business connected therewith.

That in the prosecution and conduct of said business and burning said lime, the said defendants use and have a large amount of coal, which said coal is brought to the premises operated and controlled by said defendants and upon which said business is conducted by means of vessels, and is unloaded from said vessels onto the wharf on said premises, and the said defendants in order to so unload said coal, had on or before said day erected and had under their control, maintenance and management upon said wharf, and projecting over the vessel from which coal was then and there being unloaded by said defendants, a run or stage, elevated at a great height above the deck of said vessel, to wit: — at a height of 20 feet.

That the plaintiff was upon said day employed by said defendants for hire, to work upon said stage and assist in unloading said coal from said vessel; in which said work it was the duty of the plaintiff [114]*114to wheel a barrow to the end of said stage projecting over the hatch of said vessel there to assist in dumping coal into said barrow when it should be hoisted from said vessel, and to wheel the same and dump it upon said wharf occupied by said defendants.

And the plaintiff avers that it was then and there the duty of said defendants for the protection and safety of their servants at work thereon to exercise reasonable care in the construction and erection of said stage and the supports thereof, and in selecting the material therefor, and to exercise like care to have, keep and maintain the same in a safe and suitable condition for unloading said coal.

That said defendants had constructed said stage and sent the plaintiff to work thereon, and in constructing the same had supported the outer or projecting end of said stage by the halyards of said vessel, which said halyards were defective, decayed, unsafe and unsuitable for said purpose; all of which was well known to the said defendants, or by the exercise of reasonable care might have been known to them.

And the plaintiff avers that upon said day, while he was in the exercise of reasonable care and in performing his duties aforesaid was standing upon the outer edge of said projecting stage, without any knowledge or means of knowledge, of the defective, decayed, unsuitable and unsafe condition of the ropes by which said stage was supported, the rope, or halyard which supported one of the outer corners of said stage suddenly broke because of its insufficiency for the pux’pose for which the defendants had made use of it, and the plaintiff was thereby projected and thrown into the hold of the vessel, falling a long distance, to wit: — a distance of thirty feet, and striking in the bottom of the hold of said vessel, and upon the beams therein, whereby he was greatly bruised, injured and shaken up, and his back and side were greatly strained and his spine injured, and he suffered and will continue to suffer great pain, both of body and mind; has expended and will be obliged hereafter to expend large sums of moxxey in medical attendance and nursing; since said injui’y has been and will continue to be wholly disabled from performing bodily labor and earning a livelihood for himself and his family; and is permanently disabled by the injuries so by him suffered by the [115]*115fault of said defendants, and which'were not contributed to in any degree by fault on his part.

Counsel argued: (1) That whether the master undertook to furnish a completed structure, and therefore in putting up the stage the employees were doing the duty of the master in the case at bar, is a question of fact to be passed upon by the jury. (2) The master delegated to the servant‘not simply the duty of selecting from material furnished by him, but his duty to furnish material, and is therefore responsible for the material negligently furnished, and (3) If we assume that the master furnished all the materials on board of the the vessel for supporting the stage, there is still evidence that the material furnished was unsuitable for the purpose and the master is therefore liable as not having furnished suitable material. Incidentally, we say that the plaintiff being sent to work on the stage after it was a completed structure is entitled to recover against the defendant, because as to him at least the defendants furnished the stage as a completed structure and are responsible for the sufficiency of it.

The plaintiff was a fellow-workman with all others of that crew of men. The rule is stated in Kelley v. Noreross, 121 Mass. 508, and cited in case of Donnelly v. Booth Bros. & Hurricane Isle Granite Co., 90 Maine, 110,' that when the master does not undertake the duty of furnishing or adapting the appliances by which the work is to be performed, but this duty is intrusted to or assumed by the workmen themselves, within the scope of their employment, he is exempt from responsibility if suitable materials are furnished and suitable workmen are employed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 A. 428, 99 Me. 112, 1904 Me. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beal-v-bryant-me-1904.