Boardman v. Creighton

49 A. 663, 95 Me. 154, 1901 Me. LEXIS 41
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 25, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 49 A. 663 (Boardman v. Creighton) 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
Boardman v. Creighton, 49 A. 663, 95 Me. 154, 1901 Me. LEXIS 41 (Me. 1901).

Opinion

Whitehouse, J.

The plaintiff brings this action as administratrix on the estate of her husband, Frank E. Boardman, to recover compensation for the pecuniary injuries resulting from his death while laboring in the defendant’s limerock quarry. The case now comes to the law court a second time on a demurrer to the plaintiff’s declaration. In the former opinion (93 Maine, 17) the court say: “The degree and kind of care which the owner of premises owes to a workman employed therein vary according to the relation existing between the parties. The care which the owner owes to his servant over whom he exercises control and who acts under the master’s directions, differs in degree from that which he owes to a mere licensee and from that which he owes to the servant of an independent contractor” ; and it was accordingly held that the declaration as it then stood, being the first count in the declaration now before the court, alleging that the intestate was killed through the negligence of the defendants when he was “legally at work” in the defendants’ quarry and when he was “employed and lawfully at work in the defendants’ quarry by the license and permission and at the request of the defendants,” was bad on demurrer, for the reason that it did not state “in what capacity the plaintiff’s intestate was employed in the quarry, whether as servant of the defendants, or the servant of an independent contractor, or as a licensee, or in some other capacity.”

In the second count in the present declaration, upon which the plaintiff must now rely, it is alleged that “ on the eighteenth, day of December, A. D. 1895, the defendants were .... the owners and operators of a certain limerock quarry and were then and there engaged in quarrying limerock in which they employed a large number of men, and it was then and there their duty, as owners aforesaid of said quarry, to- provide .... a suitable place for all persons lawfully at work therein, whether directly em[157]*157ployed by them, or by some other persons with their knowledge or permission.

“And on said eighteenth day of December the defendants had contracted with one Whitney to dig limerock for them by the cask in said quarry; and said Whitney had then employed one Frank E. Boardman.....to dig limerock therein for and to be used by said defendants; and it then and there became the legal duty of the defendants, while said Boardman was at work for said Whitney in said quarry, to see that the walls and bluffs of said quarry were examined from time to time in order to ascertain if any loose rock was likely to fall upon him the said Boardman; . . . . and the plaintiff says the defendants so carelessly and negligently permitted the said Whitney employed as aforesaid, to remove and excavate limerock from the walls of said quarry and from other parts thereof, and carelessly and negligently permit said Whitney to quarry and blast the rock in said quarry, so as to render the walls on the westerly side thereof unsafe for said Board-man to work therein. . . .

“And the plaintiff avers that the death of said Boardman was caused by the wrongful and negligent act of defendants in not providing suitable appliances for the purpose of ascertaining the condition of said quarry as aforesaid, and in permitting the dangerous condition of said quarry to exist while the said Frank E. Boardman was lawfully at work therein as aforesaid, and the plaintiff avers that the said Frank E. Boardman was killed and his death was caused by the negligent acts and defaults of the defendants who were the owners and operators.”

The introductory averment in the count, that the defendants were “engaged in quarrying limerock in which they employed a large number of men” must be considered, and obviously was intended to be construed, in connection with the allegations in the succeeding paragraphs that “the defendants had contracted with one Whitney to dig limerock for them by the cask in said quarry,” and that the plaintiff’s intestate, Frank E. Boardman, was employed by Whitney, the contractor to work for him in the quarry, and at the time of the accident was engaged in digging limerock under [158]*158this employment. Thus construed, the declaration alleges in effect that the defendants operated a quarry by means of one Whitney, an independent contractor, and it contains no allegation that they operated the quarry in any other manner or by any other means.

It does not allege that under their contract with Whitney the defendants retained any supervision or control over the quarry, or gave any directions or exercised any authority whatever respecting its operation and management after Whitney took possession.

The relation of master and servant between the defendants and the intestate is not alleged to have existed, and there is no claim in the declaration to recover on that ground. On the contrary, it is distinctly alleged that the intestate was the servant of Whitney who was operating the quarry under his contract with the defendants.

Nor is there any allegation that the condition of any part of the quan-y was unsafe at the time Whitney took possession and commenced operations under his contract. On the contrary, it is distinctly alleged, as one of the causes of the accident, that “the defendants so carelessly and negligently permitted the said Whitney ... to remove and excavate limerock from the walls of said quarry and from other parts thereof and carelessly and negligently permit said Whitney to quarry and blast the rock in said • quarry so as to render the walls on the westerly side thereof unsafe for said Boardman to work them.” The dangerous conditions complained of are thus alleged to have been created by the operations under Whitney after he took possession of the quarry.

The declaration further alleges, however, that “it then and there became the legal duty of the defendants, while said Boardman was at work for said Whitney in said quarry, to see that the walls and bluffs of said quarry were examined from time to time in order to ascertain if any loose rock was likely to fall upon him the said Boardman.” But as.fully shown in the opinion of the court in this case in 93 Maine, 17, such a general allegation of duty is simply a statement of a conclusion of law, whereas by the settled rules of pleading the facts from which the duty arises, “must be spread upon the record so that the court can see that the duty is [159]*159made out. ” The rule is also clearly stated in Clyne v. Helmes, 61 N. J. 358, as follows: “In an action of tort to recover damages for personal injuries an allegation of duty is insufficient. The facts and circumstances from which the duty arises must be set out in the declaration, and the sufficiency of the pleading must be determined from the facts from which the duty is deduced.”

It is, also, alleged in the declaration to be the duty of the defendants, as owners of the quarry, “to provide suitable tools, machinery and other appliances for the carrying on of said work, as well as a safe and suitable place for all persons, lawfully at work therein.” Here, again, there is no statement of any special facts or circumstances from which such a duty could arise; but throughout the declaration all duties alleged to be resting on the defendants are made to depend on the general averment that the quarry was owned by the defendants and operated by the contractor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 A. 663, 95 Me. 154, 1901 Me. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boardman-v-creighton-me-1901.