Belkin v. Skinner & Eddy Corp.

204 P. 1046, 119 Wash. 80, 1922 Wash. LEXIS 736
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 13, 1922
DocketNo. 16453
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 204 P. 1046 (Belkin v. Skinner & Eddy Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Belkin v. Skinner & Eddy Corp., 204 P. 1046, 119 Wash. 80, 1922 Wash. LEXIS 736 (Wash. 1922).

Opinions

Bridges, J.

— The respondent was injured while riveting a beading around the hatch of a vessel being com [81]*81structed by tbe appellant. Tbe latter appeals from a judgment based on the verdict of tbe jury awarding respondent damages.

There was testimony tending to show tbe following facts: Tbe respondent was an expert riveter. Three persons work with him; one beats tbe rivets or bolts to a white beat and throws them, one at a time, to a companion, who inserts them, while still very hot, in tbe boles which they are to fill. Immediately another man bolds a heavy crowbar, or like instrument, against the rivet, and tbe riveter, with an automatic machine, at once does tbe driving. All of this work must be done while tbe rivet is nearly white hot. Tbe riveting machine is spoken of as a “gun” because of its resemblance to that instrument. It is operated by compressed air, and strikes about 1,800 blows a minute. It has a recoil similar to that of a gun. In order that be may not be knocked off bis balance by tbe recoil, tbe riveter must brace himself by putting one foot back of tbe other. Tbe work must be done with great rapidity. It takes about thirty seconds or a little more to drive each rivet.

About four o’clock of tbe day of tbe injury, one of appellant’s foremen directed respondent to rivet tbe beading around one of tbe batches. At that time respondent asked tbe foreman if tbe necessary staging was prepared, and be was informed that it was, and that be should work overtime, up to six o ’clock if necessary, because it was required that tbe boat should be finally completed on a definite near date. Tbe beading to be riveted was on the combing of tbe batch where it connects with tbe deck of tbe boat. Tbe batch in question was about thirty feet long by eighteen feet wide. It was customary at tbe plant in question and elsewhere for tbe staging upon which tbe [82]*82riveter would stand to consist of three planks placed side hy side and each about a foot in width, and to extend around the sides and ends of the hatch. The staging customarily comes up nearly flush with the base of the hatch combing, and extends out into the hatch opening, that is, over the hold, some three feet or a little more. In this particular instance, but two planks were used to make the staging, each a foot wide, thus making the staging a little more than two feet in width. This staging was constructed around both sides and at one end of the hatchway, but at the other end there was no planking upon which the riveter might stand.

The respondent commenced his w;ork on one side of the hatchway, at the comer where planking was laid across the end of the hatch. At that point the side staging was practically flush with the base of the combing, thus allowing something more than two feet of planking upon which the respondent might do his work. But this side planking, as it approached the other end of the hatch, was, for some reason, pushed in under the deck to the extent of some five or six inches, so that, as respondent approached the end where there was no planking, the platform on which he was required to stand was only about eighteen inches wide. While he was riveting on the side of the hatch, at a point some eighteen inches or two feet from the end where there was no planking, he stepped back for the purpose of bracing hynself, but his foot went out beyond the planking and he fell several feet and was seriously injured. The testimony tended to show that, had there been planking or a platform across the end of the hatch near which he was working, his foot would have found a hold on that portion of the planking and he would not have fallen, nor probably would he have fallen had the staging along [83]*83the side of the hatch been parallel with the combing and not pushed in under the deck five or six inches.

Appellant’s chief argument is that respondent fell as a result of his own carelessness, or, if the staging was defective, he should have known it, and consequently assumed the risk of working on it. Unquestionably the general rule is that the master must furnish his servant with a reasonably safe place in which to work; but it is equally well established that the servant may not blindly rely upon this duty of the master, for he must use some care and caution for his own welfare and protection. In other words, the servant will be held bound to observe those defects in a place where he is put to work which are perfectly open and obvious, and which a person of ordinary care and caution, working under like circumstances, would observe. But whether, in a particular instance, a servant must, as a matter of law, observe the defects and appreciate the dangers depends, to a large extent, upon the particular circumstances surrounding him and the opportunity given him to make such observations. The rule is very clearly stated by Mr. Justice Harlan, in Kane v. Northern Central Railway Co., 128 U. S. 91, 32 L. Ed. 339, as follows:

“But in determining whether an employee has recklessly exposed himself to peril, or failed to exercise the care for his personal safety that might reasonably be expected, regard must always be had to the exigencies of his position, indeed, to all the circumstances of the particular occasion.”

The respondent’s testimony tended to show that he relied upon the assurance- of the master that the staging had been constructed and was ready for him, and that, because of the great rapidity with which he was required to do the work, he did not have much opportunity to make observations concerning the safety of [84]*84the staging. He says that he did observe that the staging appeared to be constructed along the entire side of the hatchway upon which he was working, but that he did not observe that one end of it was pushed some five or six inches under the deck of the vessel, nor did he observe that the end he was approaching and where he fell had no planking whatsoever. When we take into consideration, as we must, the rapidity with which the respondent’s work must be done, and that each rivet must be driven while it is very hot, and that the instant he has completed driving one rivet his companions have placed another in position to be at once driven, and that the rivets in this particular instance were about six inches apart, and that the work was being done by an instrument which required the riveter to almost constantly give his attention to the work he was doing, we cannot say, as a matter of law, that the respondent was bound to see the alleged defects in the staging.

Appellant has cited many cases from this and other courts in support of its argument on these questions. We do not think any of them are controlling. Whether one has, as a matter of law, assumed the risks or has been guilty of negligence depends largely upon the circumstances and conditions surrounding him. In certain cases the court may say that a plaintiff must, of necessity, have seen the defects and appreciated the dangers, while under other circumstances the court would not feel like so declaring, and such is the situation here. We think the trial court properly submitted to the jury the questions of assumption of risk and contributory negligence.

Appellant complains of the following instruction given by the court:

“In order to charge a servant .with assumption of risk it is necessary that it be made to appear that the [85]*85servant knew and appreciated the danger from which such injury resulted.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
204 P. 1046, 119 Wash. 80, 1922 Wash. LEXIS 736, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/belkin-v-skinner-eddy-corp-wash-1922.