Dailey v. Swift & Co.

96 A. 603, 90 Vt. 69, 1916 Vt. LEXIS 240
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedFebruary 4, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 96 A. 603 (Dailey v. Swift & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dailey v. Swift & Co., 96 A. 603, 90 Vt. 69, 1916 Vt. LEXIS 240 (Vt. 1916).

Opinion

Munson, J.

This case was disposed of on the first trial by directing a verdict for the defendant, and the judgment then rendered was reversed by this Court. 86 Vt. 189. The case is now here on exceptions to a judgment obtained by the plaintiff and to various rulings made on the trial.

The defendant does not question that the decision rendered by this Court on the first trial remains the law of the case until it is finally disposed of. Its claim is that the evidence given on the second trial differs substantially from that given on the first; so that the case as now presented is not within the former decision of the Court, nor within the authorities then relied upon.

The evidence to be examined and compared in disposing of this claim is that tending to prove a promise of the defendant which is relied upon to show that the plaintiff did not voluntarily assume certain known risks attending his work on a platform from which cars were supplied with ice. The defendant contends that the complaint and assurance shown in the first trial were confined to the want of a railing, while the evidence in the second trial relates to a general objection and undertaking; that the former decision is to be interpreted and measured by the case as then presented and the authorities cited in support of it; and that the doctrine relied upon, as uniformly applied, extends only to promises based on some specific complaint.

The transcript of the former trial is not among the papers submitted, and we turn to the opinion for a statement of the complaint and undertaking as then presented. The opinion states that the plaintiff was hired by the defendant’s foreman and manager to ice cars from the defendant’s ice house; that after talking over the terms of his employment, and before beginning work, plaintiff told the manager that he had seen the work done on the platform where he was to work, ‘ ‘ and that he regarded it as a careless place to work, unless a train of ears stood in front of the platform, and that he hesitated about tak[71]*71ing the employment,” and that the manager thereupon said: “You never mind the platform, if anything happens to you up there it will be made all right; ’ ’ that while the plaintiff worked there the platform remained as it was, “without any guard or railing on its east side to obviate or lessen the danger of a servant’s falling off, in ease of accident, when engaged thereon in such work. ’ ’

In developing the questions in the case, it was said that unless the plaintiff voluntarily assumed the risk consequent on the known condition of the platform the defendant was bound to exercise reasonable care to make the place reasonably safe for the work; that on the evidence presented it was for the jury to determine, “whether the platform, without any guard or railing on its east side to prevent a servant from falling off, when performing such work, was a reasonably safe place for that purpose, and, if not, whether this was due to defendant’s negligence;” that inasmuch as the plaintiff did not claim but that he had full knowledge and appreciation of the dangers incident to the structural condition of the platform in the respect named, the important, and perhaps the sole, question in this branch of the case was, “Did he voluntarily encounter the risk, within the meaning of the maxim, volenti non fit injuria.”

It now appears that the plaintiff was first hired for this work by a foreman named Benjamin, and worked under this engagement about twelve years, and that after leaving the employment for a time he was hired again by a foreman named Pinney, and then continued to work until the accident, which occurred about six years later. On the first trial the plaintiff testified regarding the first hiring only, no reference being made during the trial to a second engagement. On the second trial, the plaintiff’s testimony regarding the first hiring was offered and received because of a reference made to that hiring in reaching the later agreement with Pinney.

The transcript of the testimony given by the plaintiff on the second trial contains the only evidence we have of a complaint and undertaking. The substance of his testimony in direct examination regarding the first hiring was, that he said to Benjamin that it looked dangerous up there on the platform without any railing or any cars there, and that Benjamin said, “Never mind that; go ahead, and if anything happens to you, you will be taken care of. ” As to the second hiring, he testified [72]*72that when Pinn'ey asked him to go back he told him the platform was a dangerous place and he had got tired of it, but finally said he would go back if he could have his old job the same as he had it before; that Pinney asked what that was, and he told him that if anything happened to him on the platform he was to be taken care of, and that Pinney said, “That is all right; if that is all, go to work.” In cross-examination plaintiff testified that his understanding from the first agreement was that if he should fall off there by reason of there being no protection the company would take care of him; that both contracts were the same, and that there never was an understanding that a rail should be put there. On being asked to state in his own way the talk with Pinney, he gave it substantially the same as in direct examination, except in omitting his reference to the platform as a dangerous place; and then said in reply to specific inquiries that there was no talk with Pinney about the danger of falling off the platform; that he understood he was to be taken care of if he got hurt in any manner while at work on the platform, — if a plank broke and he fell through, or if he slipped on the platform by reason of its being icy; but that if ice fell against him there that would not be the fault of .the platform.

In its charge the court referred to the plaintiff’s evidence as tending to show that at the time he entered the defendant’s employment the defendant’s foreman told him in substance that if anything happened to him up there — meaning on the platform — it would be made all right, or that he would be taken care of. The following special inquiry was submitted to the jury and received an affirmative reply: “Did the defendant’s foreman agree with the plaintiff that in case the plaintiff was injured while working on the platform, he would be taken care of as claimed by the plaintiff?”

So it appears that the case was submitted to the jury, and was disposed of by them, on the theory that the promise of the defendant was a general assurance against any injury received in doing his work on the platform by reason of its unsafe condition; and that this was in accordance with the evidence and claim of the plaintiff. But the opinion disposing of the case as first tried puts it upon the ground of an assurance against the danger resulting from the want of a railing, and its statement of the conclusion of the Court is as follows: There seems to be no doubt “that the assurance of the defendant’s foreman and [73]*73manager to the plaintiff at the time the contract was made, is evidence of much weight relevant to the question whether the latter voluntarily incurred the risk incident to his work on the platform, and that this question, on all the evidence, was for the jury to determine.” The question is whether the change in the evidence presents a material difference as regards the application of the rule concerning'the voluntary assumption of risks.

It is clear that the risk arising from the want of a railing is covered by the broader assurance testified to on the second trial.

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Related

Perkins v. Vermont Hydro-Electric Corp.
177 A. 631 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 A. 603, 90 Vt. 69, 1916 Vt. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dailey-v-swift-co-vt-1916.