Evans v. Portland Ry. L. & P. Co.

135 P. 206, 66 Or. 603, 1913 Ore. LEXIS 391
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 30, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 135 P. 206 (Evans v. Portland Ry. L. & P. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Evans v. Portland Ry. L. & P. Co., 135 P. 206, 66 Or. 603, 1913 Ore. LEXIS 391 (Or. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Moore

delivered the opinion of the court.

It appears from a transcript of the testimony that the defendant erected at Portland, Oregon, a powerhouse a part of which was constructed of concrete. From an adjacent railway line the defendant also built a spur track on sharp reverse curves, but so arranged that freight-cars could be run from the main line south into the power-house through a door near the northwest corner of that building. This spur track at and for some distance north of the power-house rested on timbers supported by piling driven into the ground. From one tier of capped piling to another were placed heavy timbers across which were laid ties, and to the top of the latter the rails forming the track were spiked. The plaintiff on November 25,1910, was in the defendant’s employ and engaged in carrying in his arms or on his shoulders, from the specified door [605]*605along the spur track about 12 or 15 feet and throwing from the trestle, lumber that had been used in making molds, into which the cement mixture, used in constructing the building, had been poured and allowed to remain until it had hardened, when the forms were torn down and the material of which they were made was carried out of the building and cast to the ground. A water-pipe beneath the trestle having been broken near the building by throwing upon it lumber used in making the forms, the defendant’s foreman in charge of the work commanded the plaintiff to carry the material he was removing from the building along the spur track about 12 or 15 feet and fling it to the ground, where employees were then engaged in gathering and burning such refuse. The plaintiff testified that when, with several pieces of scantling on his shoulder, he had reached the proper place on the trestle from the east side of which he was about to throw the waste material, some person from a window in the power-house immediately above the entrance of the spur track into the building shouted, “Look out below!” whereupon the witness suddenly cast the pieces of studding, and in doing so a nail in the lumber caught in his clothing, causing him to lose his balance, precipitating him to the ground, a distance of 23 feet, whereby he was injured ; that when he was hurt there was no guard-rail on the end of the ties on the spur track; that a handrail or some other contrivance could have been put up at the place at which he fell without impairing the efficiency of the structure, and thus have prevented the injury; and that no rules had been promulgated by the defendant with respect to the manner of performing such service.

The testimony of the defendant’s witnesses is to the effect that the spur track is about 10 feet wide; that fastened near the end of the ties and about 2 feet out[606]*606side the rails forming the track is a wooden guard 6 by 8 inches, to keep the ties in place and to prevent the cars from running off the trestle in case they left the track; that some of the freight-cars upon which electric machinery is transferred into the power-house are so wide that, owing to the sharp curves of the spur track, bricks have been knocked out of the 12-foot entry into the building, and it would be impossible to maintain a guard-rail or other like contrivance on the end of the ties because the steps of such cars would, on the sharp bends of the track, knock down any like protection if it had been erected"; that directly above the spur track where it enters the power-house there is no window, but the opening referred to is 10 feet west.of the nearest rail; that lumber dropped from that window would fall 8 feet west of the track; and that it would be impossible for any person to throw material used in making forms for concrete from the window to the place where the plaintiff was standing just before he fell.

It is contended by defendant’s counsel that an error was committed in refusing to grant a judgment of non-suit when the plaintiff had introduced his testimony and rested. As the chief grounds urged in support of the motion are also assigned as errors to parts of the court’s charge, the latter specifications will alone be considered.

The instructions to the giving of which exceptions were taken by defendant’s counsel are to the effect that the testimony disclosed that plaintiff’s cause of action was governed by the provisions of Chapter 3, Laws Or. 1911, page 16, and generally known as the Employer’s Liability Act; that such statute declares that when any structure is erected more than 20 feet above the ground and is used for scaffolding purposes it is the duty of the master to place thereon a guard[607]*607rail, provided such means for the protection and safety of the life and limbs of the servant do not impair the efficiency of the structure; that, if the defendant knew the trestle was being used by its servants as a place from which to throw lumber taken from the powerhouse, the defendant was bound to place along such platform a guard-rail, if it did not impair the efficiency of the trestle, which was the first question to be determined; that, if the jury found it was the duty of the defendant to put up such protection and there had been a failure in this respect, the plaintiff, by remaining in the service, did not assume the dangers incident thereto; and the legal principles of assumption of risk and contributory negligence had been abrogated by the act referred to; and, though by such enactment a servant might he guilty of that degree of contributory negligence which would bar a recovery of any damages for an injury sustained, such question, however, was not a matter of law to be decided by the court, but was an issue of fact to be determined by the jury in estimating the damages to which an employee might he entitled. The court also declined to give instructions requested by defendant’s counsel with respect to the converse of each of these' legal propositions, and exceptions were taken to such refusals.

In the title of the act as printed, a line was evidently omitted by inadvertence. The correct inscription should read as follows: “An act providing for the protection and safety of persons engaged in the construction, repairing, alteration, or other work, upon buildings, viaducts, tanks, stacks and other structures, or engaged in any work upon or about electrical wires, or conductors or poles, or supports, or other electrical appliances or contrivances carrying a dangerous current of electricity or about any machinery or in any dangerous (occupation, and extending and defining the [608]*608liability of employers in) any or all acts of negligence, or for injury or death of their employees, and defining who are the agents of the employer, and declaring what shall be a defense in actions by employees against employers, and prescribing a penalty for a violation of the law”: Oregon Election Pamphlet for November, 1910, page 82. The words left out of the printed title are included within the parentheses as indicated in the language last quoted.

The enactment in question as far as deemed involved herein follows:

“All owners * * engaged in the construction * *

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
135 P. 206, 66 Or. 603, 1913 Ore. LEXIS 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-portland-ry-l-p-co-or-1913.