Hayes v. Western Fuel Co.

127 P. 518, 19 Cal. App. 634, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 178
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 7, 1912
DocketCiv. No. 937.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 127 P. 518 (Hayes v. Western Fuel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayes v. Western Fuel Co., 127 P. 518, 19 Cal. App. 634, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 178 (Cal. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

Respondent was awarded by a jury a verdict for $5,000 for personal injuries received while employed in filling buckets with coal in the hold of a vessel belonging to appellant. The circumstances of the accident, the extent of the damage and the particular ground for charging responsibility to defendant are disclosed in the following allegations of the complaint:

“That on said twenty-sixth day of March, 1907, while plaintiff was so employed by defendant and while he was so engaged in the performance of the duty for which he was employed, to wit, filling said buckets with coal in the hold of said vessel, defendant was hoisting from the hold of said vessel one of said buckets filled with coal, and the same overturned above said hatchway and at a great height, to wit, *637 seventy-five feet above and directly over the place in said hold where plaintiff was working, and the contents of said bucket, to wit, over one thousand pounds of coal, fell upon and around said plaintiff, and broke and splintered the bones of one of plaintiff’s legs so badly that part of said bones had to be removed, and broke two of plaintiff’s ribs, and otherwise greatly bruised and injured plaintiff and thereby caused him great pain and suffering.
“That said bucket which overturned and emptied its contents upon plaintiff as aforesaid was at the time, and long prior thereto, defective and broken; that the rim on the upper rear part of said bucket was cracked, thereby causing the latch which is fastened to the bale of said bucket at one end, and to the clutch on the rear of said bucket at the other, and which prevents said bucket from dumping before reaching the defendant’s bunkers, to becpme loosened and thereby causing said bucket to overturn in midair. ’ ’

It is also alleged that the defendant had knowledge of the defective condition of the bucket, but negligently continued to use it till plaintiff was injured. The answer expressly admitted the employment and the allegations concerning the nature of the work, the character of the accident and the extent of the injury, but denied the other material averments of the complaint and set up as an affirmative defense that-the injury was caused by the fault and negligence of the plaintiff, and, furthermore, that said injury was chargeable to the risks of plaintiff’s employment at the time of the accident, “which said risks had been and were duly assumed by the plaintiff.”

From the standpoint of respondent the case involves primarily the application of the familiar legal doctrine, declared in the decisions over and over again, that it is the duty of the master to furnish reasonably safe appliances to the servant for the prosecution of his work and to exercise reasonable care in keeping said appliances in a safe condition for use, and if an injury results to the servant from the failure of the master to perform this duty, the latter is liable for the consequences. Speaking generally, it may be said that in the record there is found ample support for this theory of respondent. From the direct and circumstantial evidence a rational inference may be drawn that the said coal bucket *638 was defective as alleged in the complaint, but it was furnished to plaintiff in that condition by appellant; that the defect was of such character as to render it unsafe to use the bucket for the purpose intended; in other words, that it was not reasonably safe to operate it as plaintiff was required to do in the prosecution of his work, and that the accident with the consequent injury would not have occurred had it not been for said defect. But, of course, it does not necessarily follow that plaintiff was entitled to recover. However, in reference to the affirmative defenses of appellant, it is confidently believed that the jury was justified in holding that the accident was not due to any contributory negligence of plaintiff, and that, in a legal sense, there was no such assumption of risk by him as to relieve defendant from liability.

These considerations will receive more specific attention as notice is given to the various contentions of appellant.

Of these, in the foreground of the discussion and manifestly constituting a proposition of vital importance in the determination of the appeal, the assertion is made by counsel that the case comes within the rule, “that where a master provides and keeps proper tools or appliances for the use of his servants and delegates to them the duty of selecting such as they require, then the master is not responsible if the servant voluntarily uses a tool or appliance that has become obviously defective and unfit for use, and is injured by reason thereof.”

Concerning this statement of the rule and the propriety of invoking it in the ease before us, several suggestions seem not inappropriate. In passing, it may be said that there is some inaccuracy in the language used. It rather implies that if the master provides and keeps only proper tools or appliances for the use of the servant, and the servant voluntarily selects therefrom one obviously unfit, the master is not liable. Where only proper tools are supplied, it is manifest that no room can be found for the unfit. But, interpreting the rule, as no doubt intended, to contemplate the case where a proper tool has become unfit from use and is then selected by the servant, it is clear, upon principle and under the authorities, that the rule must be applied with great caution. Otherwise, we will find the problem embarrassed by the presence of two antagonistic and- irreconcilable- principles. Since the master *639 is bound to furnish suitable tools and appliances, the servant may assume, of course, that the master will perform that legal and moral duty. It necessarily follows that the servant does not assume the risk that comes from the use of unfit and improper appliances. Nor is the servant required to distrust the fidelity of the master to this obligation, nor does the law demand of the servant that he make an examination or inquiry at his peril to ascertain the fitness of the tool or appliance for the work intended. This would be in contravention of the doctrine of the master’s responsibility for the character of the tools. Of course, however, the law, as well as common sense and common justice, demands that the servant shall comport himself as upright and reasonable men ordinarily do, and if he discovers the unfitness of the appliance and appreciates the danger incident to its use and, nevertheless, he continues without complaint in the prosecution of the work and injury results, the law, in consonance with the judgment of fair-minded men, exacts of him the penalty for his folly, and attributes the consequences to his own negligence rather than to that of the master. Furthermore, there may be instances where the defect or unfitness of the appliance is so palpable and obtrusive and the danger incident to its use, under the circumstances disclosed, so palpable, that knowledge of these facts, even in the absence of direct evidence to that effect, must be imputed to the servant. No circumstance, however, should be permitted to obscure or derogate from the importance of the initial and primary obligation of the master to furnish suitable tools and appliances.

It may be well to notice how the subject has been treated by some of the authorities.

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266 Cal. App. 2d 396 (California Court of Appeal, 1968)

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Bluebook (online)
127 P. 518, 19 Cal. App. 634, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayes-v-western-fuel-co-calctapp-1912.