Johnson v. Boston Tow-Boat Co.

135 Mass. 209, 1883 Mass. LEXIS 55
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 21, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 135 Mass. 209 (Johnson v. Boston Tow-Boat Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Boston Tow-Boat Co., 135 Mass. 209, 1883 Mass. LEXIS 55 (Mass. 1883).

Opinion

W. Allen, J.

The defendant is a corporation engaged in the business of moving cargoes and merchandise by means of lighters furnished with hoisting apparatus. The lighter on which the plaintiff was employed was equipped with a steam engine and derrick for hoisting merchandise, and, at the time the plaintiff was injured, was taking on a load of iron rails. There were six men employed upon it, — Moore, the captain, Burns, who had charge of the engine, and four laborers, of whom the plaintiff was one. The plaintiff was injured by the falling of a rail upon him in consequence of the giving way of a rope called a fall, part of the hoisting apparatus. The only negligence charged was in respect of the rope. The plaintiff contended that the defendant was negligent in not providing and maintaining a sufficient rope; and there was evidence tending to show that the rope gave way in consequence of the negligence of Moore, and also that it was in consequence of the negligence of Burns.

The jury were properly instructed that, if the defendant knew, or, in the exercise of reasonable care, would have known, of the defect in the rope, and did not remedy the same, or take proper means to guard the plaintiff against it, it was negligent. These instructions were not objected to.

The jury were also instructed that the defendant, without any negligence of its own, might be liable for the negligence of [210]*210Moore or of Burns, under the rule of respondeat superior, and it is to this part of the instructions, and to refusals to instruct in reference to this, that exceptions are taken.

The ground upon which this liability is put in the charge to the jury, and obviously the only ground upon which it could be put, is that Moore and Burns might not, in respect of their negligent acts, have been fellow servants with the plaintiff. The alleged negligence of Burns was in not repairing the rope, as he was ordered to do by Moore. Such negligence would plainly be that of a fellow servant, and the, question has been argued, and will be further considered, with respect to Moore alone. The question is not whether Moore was in some respects a fellow servant with the plaintiff: unquestionably he was. The instructions assume that he was, and present the question whether, in the particular act in which he was negligent, he was acting as such servant, or as the representative of the defendant. The question put to the jury was, “ When the captain got a new rope in place of a defective one, did he do it as the agent of the defendant in doing its duty of providing a suitable apparatus or machine for its servants to work with, or did he do it simply as a fellow servant ? ” The instructions were erroneous in leaving this question to the jury. Moore was employed by the defendant to do certain things upon the lighter. Whether in doing them he was a servant engaged with others upon the lighter in a common employment, or was a deputy master or vice-principal, was a question of' law, and not of fact. What he was employed to do was a question of fact; the capacity in which he did it was an inference of law. Had there been any question as to the facts, they should have been left to the jury, with instructions as to the legal inferences to be drawn from the facts which should be found. As the facts were not disputed, the question left to the jury was one of pure law. If the jury had found the law correctly, this error might have been cured; but it cannot appear that the verdict may not have been found upon an incorrect answer to this question. We think the court should have ruled, in accordance with the prayer of the defendant, that Moore and the plaintiff were fellow servants.

The evidence bearing upon the point in question was not controverted, and the material part of it was, in substance, this: [211]*211The defendant employed in its business twenty-four boats and one elevator, and had a general manager, who had the general control of its business and the charge of all its employees, boats and apparatus, and who had under him a superintendent of repairs, who visited and inspected all the lighters and apparatus used in the business. Moore was called the captain of the lighter on which the plaintiff was employed, and his duties were, as he testified, to put the men to work, to see that they did work, to keep their time, and to see to everything generally; if a new fall was needed, he was to give notice to the general manager and get an order for a new one, or to get a new one himself, if it was necessary and he did not find the manager. There was a spare fall on board at the time. The manager’s instructions to Moore were to replace the falls with new ones whenever there was any defect. It did not appear how often it was necessary to renew the falls, except by inference from the fact stated, that from April 30th to June 8th was not an improper time for one to remain in use. The alleged negligence of Moore was in allowing a rope to remain in - use after he knew that it was unsafe. Moore’s duty was that of special superintendence. He was a foreman to superintend the labor of the men and the use and condition of the apparatus upon his boat. It is not disputed that, in superintending the labor of the men and the use of the apparatus and appliances, he was a fellow servant with the plaintiff, but it is contended that, in his supervision of the condition of the appliances, he was acting, not as a servant, but as a deputy master.

The defendant was under obligation to its servants to use reasonable diligence to maintain in suitable condition the appliances furnished for their use. If the defendant exercised that diligence, and provided suitable means for keeping its apparatus in proper condition, and employed competent servants to see that the means were properly used, it had fulfilled its duty. It was incidental to the use of the apparatus — a part of its contemplated use — that the rope should be occasionally renewed; and when the defendant had furnished the means for that renewal, and employed Moore to make the renewal whenever needed, it employed him as a servant, and not as agent or deputy. When a master has furnished suitable structures, means, and appliances [212]*212for the prosecution of a business, all persons employed by him in carrying on the business by the use of the means furnished, including those who use the means directly in the prosecution of the business, those who maintain them in a condition to be used, and those who adapt them to use by new appliances and adaptations incidental to their use, are fellow servants in the general employment and business. One employed in the care, supervision and keeping in ordinary repair of the means and appliances used in a business, is engaged in the common service. Thus, a person charged with the duty of keeping the track of a railway in repair; Waller v. South Eastern Railway, 2 H. & C. 102; the chief engineer on a steam-vessel, whose duty it was to see that the machinery was kept in order; Searle v. Lindsay, 11 C. B. (N. S.) 429; an “ underlooker ” in a mine, whose duty it was to examine the roof of the mine and prop it when dangerous; Hall v. Johnson, 3 H. & C. 589; the general foreman and manager of extensive builders and contractors; Gallagher v. Piper, 16 C. B. (N. S.) 669; the superintendent having the general charge and management of a large manufacturing establishment, and having the management of lighting the mill and manufacturing gas for that purpose; Albro v. Agawam Canal, 6 Cush. 75; — were all held to be servants.

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Bluebook (online)
135 Mass. 209, 1883 Mass. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-boston-tow-boat-co-mass-1883.