Booth Packing Co. v. Greuner

99 A. 714, 129 Md. 392, 1916 Md. LEXIS 177
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 13, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 99 A. 714 (Booth Packing Co. v. Greuner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Booth Packing Co. v. Greuner, 99 A. 714, 129 Md. 392, 1916 Md. LEXIS 177 (Md. 1916).

Opinion

Stockbridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Booth Packing Company in 1911 was a corporation engaged in the packing of vegetables and fruits. The equitable plaintiff obtained employment with the company in that year, when he was fourteen years old. He was not engaged to do any specific work, his employment being general, nor was any limitation or restriction named as to what he should not do. The first work to which he was assigned was sweeping up about the place.

*394 Some three or four weeks after the plaintiff went to work at the packing* house, the accident happened in which the plaintiff was -injured, out of which this action arises.

Among’ the articles packed by the defendant were pears. After being pared these were placed in a tub, from which they were transferred to metal buckets, perforated on the bottom and sides similar to a colander. The buckets were then placed in a vat or tank of hot water which was about four feet from the tub. From the hot tank the buckets of fruit were transferred to a tank of cold water situate on the opposite side of the hot tank from the tub, and at an equal distance. These two tanks were each about twelve feet in length, and had a height from the floor of three feet or three feet two inches. Along the length of each tank, and raised some sis or eight inches above the floor ran platforms or gratings built of rough planks, with spaces between the planks for any water which fell on them to drain off.

On the day of the accident the plaintiff was assigned to work on the platform between the tub and the hot tank, where his work consisted in partly filling the buckets with the fruit which had been pared, and placing them in the hot tank, from which they were removed and placed in the cold tank by another employee, whose station was on the grating between the hot and cold tanks. In the bottom of the hot tank for a depth of ten inches was water, heated to or nearly to the boiling point, and between the top of the water and the top of the tank was a space of twelve inches. While performing his work the plaintiff slipped or fell into the tank containing the hot water, from which he was drawn by the workman stationed between the two tanks. The injury which he suffered was a severe scalding of his legs and parts of his body.

The main question is, whether the employer had met the duty required of him by law of providing a safe place for the servant to perform his work, and whether the work was so dangerous in its nature as to- impose a duty upon the *395 master of cautioning or warning the servant, and if so, whether that duty was fulfilled.

The r*ecord presents three bills of exception. Of these, the first two were to the admission in evidence of the testimony of a physician as to the probable, permanent effect of the injury to the plaintiff. Ho error is perceived in these rulings of the Court. The physician had examined the hoy and attended him at the time of the accident, and the treatment had continued for over six months, during which he had made sixty-three dressings of the injured parts. Certainly if any one was competent to speak as to the probability of permanent injury it was a physician who had had such opportunities for long continued observation, and the evidence given by him was subsequently given without objection by another physician, Hr. George Heller, so. that, neither of these exceptions afforded any ground for a reversal of the judgment rendered. Howard County v. Pindell, 119 Md. 69; Doyle v. Gibson, 119 Md. 36.

The remaining bill of exception was to the action of the Court in its ruling upon the prayers of the plaintiff, two in number; those of the defendant, twelve in number; and the special exception of the defendant to the granting °of the plaintiff’s, first prayer.

There is, no occasion to discuss, the second prayer of the plaintiff, which was the customary damage prayer in such eases, or the prayers, of the defendant numbered one, two, four, five, seven and eight, all of which were granted, or the prayer of the defendant, numbered three, which in slightly different phraseology was fully covered by the prayer numbered five, offered by the defendant and granted by the. Court.

Of the remaining prayers, defendant’s prayer 0 sought to take the case from the jury on the ground of contributory negligence; prayer H asked a like instruction upon the theory of the assumption of risk. The defendant’s sixth prayer was, objectionable for the reason that it segregated certain facts, and asked an instruction in favor of the de *396 fendant upon the facts so segregated, which constitutes a vice frequently condemned by this Court. Whisner v. Whisner, 122 Md. 195; Dolby v. Larrimore, 121 Md. 618; Robinson v. Silver, 120 Md. 41; Goodman v. Saperstein, 115 Md. 678.

This leaves for consideration the ruling of the Court upon the plaintiff’s first prayer, and the prayers of the defendant which sought to withdraw the case entirely from the consideration of the jury.

The obligations of the master to provide the servant a safe place in which to work, to give proper instructions as to the method of performing his work, and to caution the servant against any dangers incident to his employment, which are not open and obvious, have been rcognized over and over again by the Courts, and nowhere any more distinctly than in this State. Ebr a failure by a master in his duty in regard to any of these he has been held accountable in damages to his servant who might suffer an injury by reason of the master’s failure.

These duties owed by the master are all the more strictly enforced when the servant is a child or youth, who by reason of his age or capacity is less able to appreciate the nature and extent of the danger to which he may be exposed, than an older person.

In cases where the master has fully performed his duty in every particular, and this appears so clearly that no two fair-minded persons can differ upon the question, it is the ■duty of the Court to direct a verdict for the defendant; but where there is a conflict in the testimony, or the evidence is of so inconclusive a character that two persons might fairly differ with regard to it, the case is one proper to be submitted to a jury. Harvey v. B. & O. R. R., 69 Md. 339; Burke v. Baltimore, 127 Md. 554.

It is not deemed essential to multiply citations of authorities for the legal propositions just stated, for1 they are so well recognized as to be elementary.

The principles stated have always been most strictly applied in the ease of children, because of their less experience *397 and but partially developed capacity to understand and appreciate the dangers which m'ay be incident to the employment. Levy v. Clark, 90 Md. 146; Hockaday v. Schloer, 125 Md. 677.

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Bluebook (online)
99 A. 714, 129 Md. 392, 1916 Md. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/booth-packing-co-v-greuner-md-1916.