Duffy v. Hobbs, Wall & Co.

135 P. 1093, 166 Cal. 210, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 307
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1913
DocketS.F. No. 5996.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 135 P. 1093 (Duffy v. Hobbs, Wall & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duffy v. Hobbs, Wall & Co., 135 P. 1093, 166 Cal. 210, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 307 (Cal. 1913).

Opinions

SHAW, J.

The defendant appeals from the judgment and from an order denying its motion for a new trial. .

The object of the action was to recover damages arising from the death of John Duffy, husband of the plaintiff, Mary A. Duffy, and father of the other plaintiffs. Duffy died from injuries received while engaged at work in a large sawmill owned by the defendant. It is alleged that his death was caused by the negligence of the defendant in failing to keep the appliances in use safe and secure.

A part of the apparatus in the mill was a conveyer or elevator to carry refuse from the saws and carriages and the mill building to a point one hundred and seventy-five feet away, where it was dropped to the ground and burned. It inclined upward from the building, so that at its extreme end it was about forty feet from the ground. It consisted of a wooden trough built like a flume open at the top, thirty-two inches wide and two feet deep. Alongside and to the right of it there was a plank walk sixteen inches wide, put there to enable the workmen to pass- along by the conveyer when necessary. Between the walk and the conveyer was a wooden railing of two by four scantling nailed to the top of wooden posts about ten feet apart. The rail was three feet higher than the walk and one foot higher than the top of the conveyer. An endless chain with cleats attached at intervals ran along in the bottom of the conveyer and thus the refuse thrown into the conveyer was carried to the end and dropped to the ground. *212 This refuse would sometimes catch and clog the conveyer and, in that case, some person would have to go out upon the walk and remove the obstruction. On the twenty-ninth day of May, 1907, in the afternoon, the conveyer became clogged in this way and Duffy and a workman named Smith went out to clean it. Smith stopped and began work just outside the mill building, Duffy passing beyond him. Smith observed Duffy until he had proceeded some ten feet beyond, but, being busy with his work, saw nothing further of him for a few minutes. Something then caused him to look up and he saw Duffy falling, as his head struck a log lying in a pool of water, under the conveyer at that point, sixteen feet below the walk. Duffy died from the injury in a few minutes. Immediately over the log one end of one of the pieces composing the railing was found to have come loose from the post to which it had been nailed and was hanging down over or on the plank walk. The other end remained fast. There was evidence tending to show that the post from which the rail had been detached was decayed, so that it would not hold nails firmly. The claim is that the rail was insecurely nailed to the post, that Duffy was using the rail as a support while at work cleaning the conveyer and that, because of its defective fastening, it broke away and caused his fall.

It appears from the evidence, without conflict, that Duffy had been in the employ of the defendant working in sawmills for thirty years in various capacities; that he had worked about this mill for eight years prior to his death; and that he had been foreman of that particular part of the mill for about two months immediately before his death, head sawyer therein for the ten months prior to that, and foreman again for a year or two preceding his becoming head sawyer. The part of the mill in his charge was called the upper floor and it included the conveyer aforesaid. He had the supervision of the forty-five men who worked in that part of the mill. His duties as foreman were to look after everything in that department, if anything went wrong or wanted repair to have it fixed, direct the men in their work, keep the conveyer in order, or see that it was done, hire and discharge the men as occasion required, see that the orders for lumber were properly and in due time filled, and to look after the general repairs of that part of the mill. Two millwrights were working under his *213 direction and it was their work to make repairs when directed to do so by him, and also without special orders to make any repairs that they observed as necessary to be done. But the rule of the mill was that all complaints of want of repairs, or defects, were to be made to Duffy and it was his duty to see to it and to observe generally whether any and what repairs were necessary or advisable and to make them or have them made. There was also a superintendent, Griffin, who had general charge of two mills belonging to the defendant, and a general superintendent, Keller, both of whom had power to order repairs made. But the part of the mill where Duffy was employed as foreman was in his immediate charge and control and he was looked to to see that it was kept in order and repair.

The railing in question, including the posts, was put up about six years before the injury to Duffy. It was made of pieces of lumber from the mill, of which there was an abundance lying about at all times. In the operation of the conveyer, sticks and timbers occasionally caught on the railing and broke it loose from the posts. It is not claimed that the posts and railing were unsafe when first constructed. In the course of nature the posts would ultimately decay and from this or other causes it had been necessary occasionally to replace a post.

The defendant, by a motion for a nonsuit, by a request that the jury be directed to return a verdict in its favor, and also by assignments of insufficiency of evidence, has presented the question whether or not, upon the facts we have stated, the defendant can be held liable for the injury and resulting death of Duffy.

The rule is well settled that an employer is bound to use ordinary care to see that his employees have a safe place in which to work, and that the tools and appliances which they are to work with are in good condition and reasonably safe for the purposes intended. He is also bound to use ordinary care to maintain them in this condition. This rule, however, does not apply between the master and the servant who is employed to perform for the master this duty to the other servants, where the injury happens because of the failure of such servant to do that part of his duty. In 4 Thompson on Negligence, section 4616, the author sums up the rule on this point as fol *214 lows: “An employee cannot recover damages from his employer from an injury proceeding from a defect in something for the safe condition of which the employee himself was responsible. This rule applies where the servant himself undertakes with the master to see to the safety of the premises or appliances about which or with which he works.” A reference to the cases will perhaps make the point more clear. In Conroy v. Clinton, 158 Mass. 321, [33 N. E. 526], the plaintiff was injured in a trench because it was not sufficiently braced to prevent caving. The shoring and bracing of the trench were entirely in his charge. The court says: “He was paid higher' wages than the other workmen to superintend the work. There is no evidence to the contrary on this point. There is, it is true, conflicting evidence on the point whether he himself put in the shoring and bracing at the place of the accident; but as he had charge of this work, and had full opportunity before going into the trench to see its condition, the question whether he did it himself is immaterial. If there was any negligence, it was his negligence; and the defendant is not liable therefor.” In Direct N. Co. v.

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Bluebook (online)
135 P. 1093, 166 Cal. 210, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duffy-v-hobbs-wall-co-cal-1913.