Deep Mining & Drainage Co. v. Fitzgerald

21 Colo. 533
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedSeptember 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 21 Colo. 533 (Deep Mining & Drainage Co. v. Fitzgerald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deep Mining & Drainage Co. v. Fitzgerald, 21 Colo. 533 (Colo. 1895).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

One of the errors assigned is to the giving by tbe court of the fourth instruction, which purports to state the law of contributory negligence. In the third instruction the court had defined negligence to consist in “ performing some act, or omitting to perform some act, which an ordinarily prudent and careful man would not perform, or omit to perform, under all the circumstances of a particular case.”

In instruction No. 4 the jury were told that if they found from the evidence that the injuries were caused through the negligence of Thomas, and that Thomas stood in such relation to the defendant as that his negligence was the negli[538]*538gence of the defendant, then their verdict should be in favor of the plaintiff, unless they also found that the plaintiff committed some act which proximately caused the injury, and but for which act the injury would not have occurred.

This instruction did not go far enough. It conflicts, as to one element, with the preceding one, and we do not find that it was elsewhere in the charge clearly supplemented, or corrected. The issue was squarely raised, and the jury should have been instructed that an omission by the plaintiff to perform some act which, if performed, would have protected him from injury, would defeat a recovery by the plaintiff just as much as if the latter had committed some act which proximately caused the injury, and but for which it would not have occurred.

There was given to the jury an instruction, not numbered, wherein they were, in substance, told that if the master, or boss, orders the servant into a situation of danger, and commands him to do certain things, and he obeys and is injured, the duty of the servant being obedience, the law will not denjr a servant so acting in obedience to command a remedy against the master on the ground of contributory negligence; “unless the danger was so glaring that no prudent man would have entered into it; * * * and where an employé is suddenly commanded by his employer to do a particular act, and'exhorted to diligence therein, he cannot be required to exercise the same degree of care in guarding against accidents as when he has more abundant time for observation and reflection.”

There was no evidence before the jury which justified the giving of such an instruction. It is altogether inapplicable to the facts of this case, and, whether right or wrong, if given when the facts called for it, its only effect was probably to confuse the minds of the jury or mislead them. A somewhat similar instruction, where the same was inapplicable to the facts, was held by this court in Burlington & Colo. R. R. Co. v. Liehe, 17 Colo. 280, prejudicial error; and equally grave was the error in giving the instruction in this case.

[539]*539In Lis complaint, by .alleging that he protested against Thomas’ engaging in the work which it was a part of his own duty to perform, plaintiff seeks to'bring his case within the rule announced in Shearman & Redfield on Negligence (4th ed.) in the last sentence of section 238. This naturally brings us to an examination of the contention of the plaintiff in error that for the act of Thomas — assuming it was negligence that caused the injury — the defendant is not liable. The discussion of this point, and its determination, will dispose of many of the errors assigned, not only as to the ruling of the court upon the motion for nonsuit, but as to a number of the instructions, and as to the sufficiency of the evidence.

While the complaint brings tbe case within the rule announced, the evidence does not support the allegations of the pleading. As has already been said, the plaintiff did not protest or object to the further sinking of the hole by Thomas, and it was conceded that Thomas was a competent miner. Plaintiff merely objected to doing so himself. He anticipated no danger therefrom, and was actuated by no fear of its result. The injury was caused, not as the result of an act done by plaintiff in obedience to orders, but by the negligent doing by Thomas of a proper act, admittedly within the line of duty of the plaintiff, and occasioned by the refusal of the latter to obey orders.

To reconcile the conflicting decisions upon the liability of a master to a servant injured by the negligence of another servant would be a task, not only beyond the power of .this court satisfactorily to perform, but one which, in the. inextricable confusion resulting from the various authorities, it would be well nigh impossible, as we think, and as has been often said- by eminent authorities, for any court to accomplish.

The so-called English rule, adopted in Massachusetts, .New -York, Maine, Pennsylvania, Indiana, Wisconsin, and 'some other states, if applied to the facts of this case, would exempt the defendant from liability, because, under such [540]*540rule, Thomas would be merely a fellow servant of the plaintiff.

Under the so-called' American rule, which is the one adopted in this state, and declared in Ohio, Connecticut, Virginia, Kentucky, Missouri, Illinois, Nebraska, Kansas, California, and other states, Thomas would be considered a vice principal of the master, for whose negligence, within the scope of his employment, the master would be liable.

The authors of Shearman & Redfield on Negligence, who are strong advocates of the American rule, at section 283 of the fourth edition of their work, say :

“ There are certain principles affecting the liability of a master, which are equally applicable, whether the American or English rule is adopted, and whether the agent, for whose negligence he is responsible to servants, is called a manager or a vice principal. In either case, the master is responsible for all the acts or defaults of the agents in his capacity as a manager, or ‘ vice principal,’ and for no others. On the one hand, the master is responsible, not only for the negligence of such an agent in selecting servants, selecting or inspecting materials, implements, etc., and giving orders which the servants are bound to obey, * * * but in short for every act which he does, that would naturally fall within the province of a master personally conducting the business, and for every omission of an act which it would have been the duty of the master, if personally present, to do. On the other hand, the master is not responsible for the negligence of such an agent in the performance of acts which are in no sense part of a master’s work and are precisely upon a level with the work of the other servants. When the manager or vice principal undertakes work in simple cooperation with other servants, and upon precisely the same footing with them, he becomes, for the time being, a mere fellow servant with them, acting as such. Thus, for example, a conductor, while acting as such, in starting or delaying the train, in warning dr failing to warn the other train hands, or in any other respect performing the usual duties of a conductor, is not, [541]*541under the American rule, a fellow servant with a brakeman on the same train. But when he offers to assist the brakeman in handling his brakes or in coupling cars, he acts only as a fellow servant; such work being no part of the duty of a conductor, as such.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Morris v. E. I. DuPont De Nemours & Co.
139 S.W.2d 984 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1940)
Morris v. Hines
187 N.W. 130 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1922)
Rio Grande Southern Railroad v. Nichols
123 P. 318 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1912)
Tunnel Mining and Leasing Co. v. Cooper
50 Colo. 390 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1911)
Novelty Theater Co. v. Whitcomb
47 Colo. 110 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1909)
Poorman Silver Mines of Colorado, Ltd. v. Devling
34 Colo. 37 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1905)
Fogarty v. St. Louis Transfer Co.
79 S.W. 664 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1904)
McQueeny v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co.
94 N.W. 1124 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1903)
Carleton Mining & Milling Co. v. Ryan
29 Colo. 401 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1902)
Thomas v. Carey
26 Colo. 485 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1899)
Denver & Rio Grande Railroad v. Sipes
23 Colo. 226 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1896)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 Colo. 533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deep-mining-drainage-co-v-fitzgerald-colo-1895.