Deane v. Roaring Fork Electric Light & Power Co.

5 Colo. App. 521
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 15, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Colo. App. 521 (Deane v. Roaring Fork Electric Light & Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deane v. Roaring Fork Electric Light & Power Co., 5 Colo. App. 521 (Colo. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

Thomson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action for personal injuries. The complaint charges that the plaintiff, Deane, was employed by the defendant, The Roaring Fork Electric Light and Power Company, to work at and near its machinery, pipes and valves, etc., through which the water of the company was transmitted; that the plaintiff, in the usual course of his employment, was engaged by the direction of the defendant in trying the works to ascertain whether the joints and connections were sufficient, and was working at or near the hydraulic valve which was part of the machinery; that this valve was guaranteed by the defendant to the plaintiff to be capable of a cold water pressure of five hundred pounds to the square inch; that the valve was unsafe, defective and insufficient, as the defendant at the time knew or ought to have known; that the defects in the valve were hidden from view, so that the plaintiff did not and could not know its unsafe condition, but relied wholly upon its external appearance and the guaranty of the defendant; that while plaintiff was working near the valve, and while it was sustaining a pressure of only three hundred and twenty-six pounds to the square inch, it. burst with great violence, causing severe and permanent injury to the plaintiff; that the defendant was negligent in providing and using, and suffering to be used, the unsafe and imperfect valve; and that the injuries suffered by the plaintiff were the result of its negligence.

[523]*523The answer denies negligence and the insufficiency of the valve; avers care in its selection; a want of knowledge or the ability to obtain knowledge that it was defective; and contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff. When the evidence in behalf of plaintiff was introduced, a motion for a nonsuit was made and allowed. The following is all the evidence bearing upon the solitary question in the case: The plaintiff was a carpenter, contractor and builder; prior to the accident he had been working for the company about five months ; he was first employed to construct its dam, and afterwards he took a contract to make window frames for its power house; at the time of the accident he was assisting in making a test of the valve, by order of Mr. William G. Coffin, who had charge of the construction of the pipe line, and was the company’s superintendent and hydraulic engineer. Joseph Mueller, who was operating a foundry in Aspen, and had experience in the manufacture of valves, saw the valve in question after it was put in place, and stated, in the hearing of the plaintiff, that the iron in the valve was too light. The plaintiff reported what Mueller had said to Mr. Doolittle, who was superintendent of the construction of the wood work, and under whose direction the plaintiff worked upon the power house. Mr. Doolittle replied that the valve had been made specially for that work, had been tested to five hundred pounds, and would stand that .pressure with safety. Mr. Mueller, on the witness stand, stated that, in his judgment, the valve was not sufficient for the pressure it was designed to stand. He also stated that no flaw or defect in the workmanship of the valve could be seen; that so far as visible signs were concerned, it was a perfect piece of work; that to a person who had not special technical knowledge upon the subject, there was nothing in the appearance of the valve to cause any alarm or uneasiness. He made no calculation'for the purpose of determining whether it was strong enough, but said that its insufficiency could be'seen by a man who was familiar with making valves and seeing valves made. He further stated that such a valve might withstand [524]*524a proper test, and upon a subsequent test, or upon actual use, its insufficiency might become apparent for the first time.

The question of contributory negligence is not in the case. The only question which we are called upon to determine is whether there was sufficient evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant to demand the submission of the case to the jury. The duty which a master owes to his servant requires the exercise by him of reasonable care and caution in the selection of machinery and appliances to be used in carrying on the business in which the servantis employed. The amount of care required depends in a considerable degree upon the character of the machinery selected and the danger attendant upon its use; and if, through the master’s failure in the exercise of such precautions as the circumstances of the particular case demand, unsafe machinery is procured, and as a consequence, the servant, without fault of his own, suffers injury, the master is liable. In an action for the injury the burden is upon the servant to establish such negligence of the master as would authorize a recovery. Negligence is not presumed; on the contrary, the presumption is that the master exercised the care which the circumstances required, and did whatever was reasonably necessary to secure the safety of the servant. It is not sufficient to prove that the injury resulted from defective or insufficient machinery; it must also appear that the master knew, or by the exercise of proper care might have known, that the machinery, by reason of its construction or its condition, was unsafe. In an action by the servant for a resulting injury, the master goes into the trial with the advantage of this presumption in his favor, and, unless evidence is introduced which has a tendency to overthrow it, there is nothing for the jury to pass "upon. The foregoing is a statement of some general and well established principles. Wells v. Coe, 9 Colo. 159; Murray v. D. & R. G. R. Co., 11 Colo. 124; Wood’s Master and Servant, sec. 382.

It remains to us to apply these principles to the evidence before "us. The injury to the plaintiff was occasioned by the bursting of the valve, and the evidence tends to prove that’ [525]*525the reason why it hurst was that the iron of which it was east was not sufficiently thick to withstand the pressure which was applied to it. The only negligence charged, or endeavored to be shown, consisted in the providing and attempted use by the defendant of a valve which was not equal to the work which was to he exacted of it; and if the defendant is liable in this action, it is either because it had actual knowledge of the insufficiency of the machine, or because it failed in something which ordinary prudence required to be done by which its insufficiency would have been revealed; and it devolved upon the plaintiff to intro! duce evidence of some fact showing such knowledge or such failure, or from which it might be reasonably inferred. The evidence is that there was nothing in the appearance of the valve itself to indicate to one without special technical knowledge upon the subject that it was in any way defective, or was not amply sufficient for the purpose for which it was designed, although its insufficiency could be seen by a man who was familiar with making valves and seeing them made. There was no evidence that any officer or agent of the company possessed the qualifications shown to be necessary for the detection, otherwise than by actual test, of the inability of the valve to answer the purpose for which it was intended; and it affirmatively and clearly appears that, except to an expert, there was nothing in the appearance of the valve from which it'could be known or suspected that it could not endure the test which was applied. The defendant is therefore not chargeable with knowledge, or with negligence in not obtaining knowledge, that the valve was unsafe or insufficient, by reason of anything about it which was visible.

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Related

Wells v. Coe
9 Colo. 159 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1886)
Murray v. Denver & R. G. R.
11 Colo. 124 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1887)
Tootle v. Cook
4 Colo. App. 111 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1893)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Colo. App. 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deane-v-roaring-fork-electric-light-power-co-coloctapp-1895.