Claris v. Oregon Short Line R. R. Co.

51 P.2d 217, 56 Idaho 169, 1935 Ida. LEXIS 50
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 5, 1935
DocketNo. 6234.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 51 P.2d 217 (Claris v. Oregon Short Line R. R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Claris v. Oregon Short Line R. R. Co., 51 P.2d 217, 56 Idaho 169, 1935 Ida. LEXIS 50 (Idaho 1935).

Opinion

*172 HOLDEN, J.

-Prior to and on March 6, 1932, George P. Claris was employed in the shops of the Oregon Short Line Railroad Company at Pocatello, Idaho, as a machinist. While operating a grease gun greasing an engine bushing, he was injured, the injury resulting in the loss of his left eye. Thereafter he brought this action against the railroad company to recover, upon charges of negligence, for the loss of his eye. Upon a trial of the cause, the lower court granted a motion by defendant railroad company for a directed verdict and, from the judgment entered thereon, Claris appealed. Upon that appeal this court reversed the judgment of the trial court and ordered a new trial. (Claris v. Oregon Short Line R. R. Co., 54 Ida. 568, 33 Pac. (2d) 348.) On the second trial of the case, Claris recovered a judgment for $7,000, from which the railroad company prosecutes an appeal.

The action is based upon the Federal Employers ’ Liability Act (35 Stat. 65). Respondent, while engaged in greasing a side rod bushing of an engine used in interstate commerce, turned a lever to actuate the operation of a grease gun (built and maintained by appellant and used in its shops), whereupon grease, water, metal shavings and borings were discharged from the grease gun into the face and eyes of the respondent with such force that particles of metal, grease, etc., became imbedded in, and under, the surface of his left eye.

While appellant assigns four errors, it contends that “It being an established fact that water was inserted into the grease gun as a prank or practical joke, the defendant is not liable, and the judgment must be set aside,” and that “The presentation of this point will, in our opinion, cover all of the assignments of error, and is so intended. ’ ’

Both Porter Graves and W. D. Furbush, the former foreman of, and the latter a machinist in, the shop where respondent was working at the time he was injured, testified that water was placed in the grease gun, and also that water was *173 placed in the grease gun for the purpose of playing a practical joke on the respondent. However, there is substantial evidence in the record that Graves, who had charge of the particular shop and grease gun in question here, supplied the respondent with the grease gun as well as the engine bushing he was greasing at the time of the injury, and that Graves, after having so supplied the engine bushing, informed respondent that the grease gun was ready and directed him to go ahead and use it. It is not contended that respondent knew water had been placed in the grease gun, nor that he was given any warning of the impending danger.

The question which appellant contends is decisive, and which it also contends must be decided favorably to it, and thus defeat a recovery by respondent, in turn, and at once, presents other questions, which, if decided favorably to respondent, would result in an affirmance of the judgment. First: Was appellant under the personal duty to furnish respondent with a safe tool with which to grease the engine bushing? Second: In supplying respondent with the engine bushing, and in informing him that the grease gun was ready, and thereby giving respondent to understand that it was in a safe condition for use, and in directing the respondent to go ahead and use the grease gun, was Graves in the discharge of a personal duty which his master, the appellant, owed the respondent ? Third: Assuming, but not conceding, that water was placed in the grease gun, and also that water was placed in the grease gun by Furbush at the direction of Graves, for the purpose of playing a practical joke on the respondent, as testified to on the second trial of the case by both Graves and Furbush, the question then arises, if, during the existence of the relation of principal and agent, the agent receives notice in his private capacity of facts not then concerning his principal, but afterwards acts for his principal in a matter in which such fact is material, should the notice so received by the agent be imputed to his principal? Fourth: Was appellant under the duty to warn the respondent that water had been placed in the grease gun? And Fifth: Is the appellant liable for having given false information to respondent *174 that the grease gun was ready, to wit, in a safe condition for use, and in then directing him to go ahead and use it? These questions will be discussed in the order above stated.

As to the first question, there can be no doubt, because it was held upon the former appeal of this case that it was the duty of the master not only to furnish its employees with safe tools, but also to keep them safe. (Claris v. Oregon Short Line R. r. Co., supra.)

We turn now to the second question. This court held in Larsen v. Le Doux, 11 Ida. 49, 81 Pac. 600 (approved and adhered to in Coulston v. Dover Lumber Co., 28 Ida. 390, 154 Pac. 636, and in Wilson v. St. Joe Boom Co., 34 Ida. 253, 200 Pac. 884), that “If the act or omission that caused the injury was one pertaining to the duty the master owed to his servant, he is responsible for the manner of its performance without regard to the rank of the servant or employee to whom it is intrusted, ’ ’ and that ‘ The true test in all cases by which it may be determined whether the. negligent act causing the injury is chargeable to the master or is the act of a coservant is, Was the offending employee in the performance of the master’s duty in reference to the particular act causing the injury, an act done in the performance of a duty that the master owed his servant? If so, his negligence is that of the master and liability follows.” Applying the test so adopted by this court, it is clear that in supplying the respondent with the grease gun in question, and in informing respondent that the grease gun was ready and thereafter directing respondent to go ahead and use it, Graves was performing a duty which his master, the appellant, owed the respondent, and that Graves was guilty of an act of omission, imputable-to appellant, in the performance of that duty by failing to supply the respondent with a safe tool with which to grease the bushing.

We believe that a complete and satisfactory answer to the third question is found in Henry v. Omaha Packing Co., 81 Neb. 237, 115 N. W. 777, where it is held that if an agent receives notice in his private capacity, during the existence of the relation of principal and agent, of facts not then *175 concerning Ms principal, but afterwards acts for the principal in a matter in which such fact is material, the notice so received by the agent should be imputed to the principal. (See, also, Restatement of the Law of Agency, vol. 1, sec. 276; Harrington v. United States, 11 Wall. (U. S.) 356, 20 L. ed. 167.)

Next for consideration comes the question as to whether appellant was under any duty to warn the respondent of the dangerous condition of the grease gun. We repeat that it was held in Larsen v. Le Doux, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
51 P.2d 217, 56 Idaho 169, 1935 Ida. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/claris-v-oregon-short-line-r-r-co-idaho-1935.