Brouseau v. Kellogg Switchboard & Supply Co.

122 N.W. 620, 158 Mich. 312, 1909 Mich. LEXIS 708
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 4, 1909
DocketDocket No. 73
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 122 N.W. 620 (Brouseau v. Kellogg Switchboard & Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brouseau v. Kellogg Switchboard & Supply Co., 122 N.W. 620, 158 Mich. 312, 1909 Mich. LEXIS 708 (Mich. 1909).

Opinions

Blair, C. J.

Plaintiff brought this action to recover damages for injuries received by him while assisting in [314]*314the loading of poles upon a car in defendant’s assembling yard. The poles were loaded onto the cars by means of a derrick.

There is a boom hanging over the center of the car and a cable running along it. At the end of the boom is fastened a pulley, in which the cable passed, hanging down from the side of the car, and the end is fastened to a pair of tongs; the other end of the cable being fastened to the whiffletree of the horses. It was my duty to take the tongs and hook them to the poles, and I would give the word to the teamster to go ahead and the pole would go to the top of the car, which was a flat car. The pole would go up to 12 feet. They were 8 inches at the top end and 15 to 18 at the butt end. I would fasten the tongs as near the center as I could judge, to balance it.”

On the afternoon of February 29, 1908, a pole which plaintiff had hooked the tongs onto fell while being raised, and caused the injury complained of. The negligence charged is that the defendant, disregarding its duty to furnish a suitable and proper pair of tongs, furnished him with tongs that were unsuited to the work, in that the points were dull and would not hook into and properly hold the poles; that plaintiff notified defendant’s superintendent of the defective condition of the tongs, and continued his work upon defendant’s promise to repair them or furnish a new pair.

The court directed a verdict for defendant, on the ground that plaintiff assumed the risk of using so simple a tool as the tongs, and was also guilty of contributory negligence.

• “ It is a simple contrivance. I do not think there was any duty with so simple a contrivance as this on the master to inspect them to see that their condition was proper. And it does not appear from the testimony in this case— which I have scrutinized pretty closely — that there was any promise to repair, or anything equivalent to a promise to repair. It is rather the opposite of that. The master didn’t say he would repair. The plaintiff claims he said, ‘ No,’ they didn’t have time to repair it, to go ahead and use this tool until they could get it sharpened, or get [315]*315another pair. I do not believe this is equivalent to a promise to repair which would naturally have misled the plaintiff. But I think when he continued to use that tool, knowing its condition, so apparent and simple as it was, that he was guilty of contributory negligence, and that he also assumed the risk.”

Plaintiff brings the record to this court for review upon writ of error. He testified, among other things, as follows :

“In the afternoon we started loading smaller poles. We did not use the same pair of tongs that we used in the morning. I went and got them on the gondola car on the northwestern spur, where we had been loading the day before. * * * I had used them about a half an hour on the morning of the 28th, loading shingle bolts. I had some trouble with the tongs at that time. They slipped from the shingle bolts. They were dull. At noon on the 29th I had a talk with Mr. Enfield regarding these tongs. Well, when I went and got the tongs, I was sent for the tongs, and I brought them back, and I told him these t6ngs were as dull as the ones we had been decking ties with when we started to load shingle bolts on the morning of the 28th. * * * He told me they were not any duller. They were no worse. I asked him if he could have them sharpened. He says, ‘No; we haven’t any time.’ * * * Mr. Enfield replied to me that he didn’t have time to sharpen the tongs then. He told me to go ahead and use them until he could have them sharpened, or get another pair. That was about 1 o’clock, and I worked with the tongs until 3 o’clock, when I was hurt. * * * Several of them had slipped owing to the tongs being dull; and, when sending up a pole, I generally watched it until the man on the car got his hand on it. Then I would turn and get another one ready to send up. I did so in this case, and turned around to get another pole to send up, and, without any warning at all, a pole came down and hit me on the ankle, and knocked me down. It struck me on the left foot about 3 o’clock in the afternoon. I did not see the pole coming. I was getting another pole to send up. I did not know where the pole was at the time it fell. It was in the air. It was part of my duty to get another pole ready. The pole was in Ole Lund’s hand on the top of the car at the time it slipped. * * * The top of the [316]*316poles that were being loaded was about nine feet from the ground. There was about three feet space in the immediate vicinity where I was working that I could move in. The rest of the space was occupied by poles and the car. * * * The tongs were dull, because the timber slipped with them. I had seen it slip before. I could see that they were dull. I had had experience enough loading poles to tell whether they were dull or whether they were sharp. * * * I had seen the same shingle bolt slip four or five times from these tongs. It would slip out of the tongs. The shingle bolts were all the way from eight to about sixteen inches. About four or five poles had slipped out of the tongs before the one that struck me. These had slipped out that afternoon between 1 and 3 o’clock. We would have to have the horse back up and hitch on again, put the tongs on again. The same pole slipped more than once. One pole slipped twice, as I remember. * * * It was necessary for me to stand under the pole when I got another one ready, after the one had gone up. There was three feet of space that I could move in. It was necessary for me to stand under the pole, because there wasn’t room for me to get away. I couldn’t back up. I could go towards the end of the car. I could have gone toward either end of the car. * * * I could not have performed my duty in any other way than I did without delaying it. If I had stepped to the south, I would still be under the pole, unless I crawled under the car. I could not have gotten another pole ready and performed my duty, if I had stepped to the side as Mr. Eastman suggested. I would have to keep the whole crew waiting.”

The principle of assumed risk rests upon the ground that it is an implied contract between the employer and the employé that the employé shall assume the risk of all dangers obviously incident to his employment, and is independent of the negligence of the employer or the contributory negligence of the employé. Bradburn v. Railroad Co., 134 Mich. 575 (96 N. W. 929); Swick v. Cement Co., 147 Mich. 454 (111 N. W. 110); Sipes v. Starch Co., 137 Mich. 258 (100 N. W. 447).

If the employé, after notifying the employer of a dangerous defect, is induced to continue his work by the em[317]*317ployer’s promise to remove the defect, his implied contract to assume the risk of such defect is suspended for a reasonable time, and the employer impliedly contracts to assume the risk of injury therefrom himself. Regarding the employer’s promise to repair as a temporary assumption of the risk on his part, it appears to us illogical to hold that the employe is no longer charged with the obvious risks of a complicated machine, but still assumes the obvious risks of a simple implement. We deem it more in accordance with the principle upon which the doctrine of assumed risk rests in this State to hold that it applies alike to simple tools and complicated machinery. See 1 Labatt on Master & Servant, pp. 1223, 1224;

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 N.W. 620, 158 Mich. 312, 1909 Mich. LEXIS 708, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brouseau-v-kellogg-switchboard-supply-co-mich-1909.