Leary v. Anaconda Copper Min. Co.

92 P. 477, 36 Mont. 157, 1907 Mont. LEXIS 22
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 18, 1907
DocketNo. 2,449
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 92 P. 477 (Leary v. Anaconda Copper Min. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leary v. Anaconda Copper Min. Co., 92 P. 477, 36 Mont. 157, 1907 Mont. LEXIS 22 (Mo. 1907).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE SMITH

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case involves an appeal from a judgment entered in favor of the plaintiff and against the appellant in the district court of Silver Bow county, and also an appeal from an order denying the defendant’s motion for a new trial.

The action was brought for the purpose of recovering damages from the defendant company for personal injuries alleged to have been suffered by-the plaintiff while in the employ of the defendant company as a miner, by reason of the negligence and carelessness of defendant in furnishing improper, unsuitable and unsafe appliances to the plaintiff with which to carry on the plaintiff’s employment. It is alleged in the complaint, in substance, that the plaintiff was engaged in fastening a rope to. certain timbers in the mine, by means of which rope the timbers, were hoisted by an engine above, through a certain chute, to one-of the upper levels in the mine, and that, by reason of the faulty construction of the chute, one of the timbers so fastened by plaintiff caught upon the projecting sides of the chute, whereupon the rope broke and the timber fell back .to the place where-plaintiff was standing, and injured him.

All of the affirmative allegations of the plaintiff which tended’ to show negligence or want of ordinary care on the part of the defendant were put in issue by the answer, and, in addition thereto, the defendant alleged that plaintiff had assumed the risks ordinarily incident to his employment, and was guilty of' [163]*163contributory negligence which tended directly and proximately to cause the injury complained of. These latter affirmative allegations of the answer were denied by the plaintiff in his reply. The cause was tried to a jury, and plaintiff had a verdict, upon which the court entered a judgment in his behalf.

Appellant complains of instruction No. 3, given by the court. It is as follows: ‘ ‘ Contributory negligence would be such negligence upon the part of the plaintiff that, but for the same, he would not have been injured.”

Contributory negligence is thus defined in Beach on Contributory Negligence, 2d ed., section 7: “Contributory negligence, in its legal signification, is such an act or omission on the part of a plaintiff, amounting to a want of ordinary care, as, concurring or co-operating with the negligent act of the defendant, is a proximate cause or occasion of the injury complained of.” We approve this definition. The instruction complained of is erroneous. It fails to tell the jury of that concurring or cooperating negligence of the plaintiff which may have been a contributing proximate cause of his injury. (See Wastl v. Montana Union Ry. Co., 24 Mont. at p. 175, 61 Pac. 9.) However, if this were the only erroneous instruction given, we should be inclined to the opinion that its vice was cured by other instructions on the same subject.

Instruction No. 22 is also attacked. That instruction reads thus: “You are instructed that one who is working in a place wherein, or with machinery or appliances by which, he is exposed to danger, must exercise his faculties for his own protection so far as his proper attention to his duties will permit; and, if he fails to do so, and is injured in consequence thereof, he is guilty of such negligence as will preclude a recovery of [for] such injury. And in this case, if you find that the plaintiff, while' performing the duties of his employment, could, in the exercise of a reasonable degree of care and prudence have stepped into a position of safety, and that he needlessly remained exposed in a position of greater hazard and danger than was necessary in carrying out the duties of his employment, [164]*164and if you so find that by so placing himself in a position of greater peril than was necessary, such conduct on the part of the plaintiff contributed to, and was the proximate cause of, his injury, you are then instructed that the plaintiff cannot recover in this action, and your verdict must be for the defendant.” This instruction is erroneous for the reasons pointed out in the Wastl Case, supra, where a similar instruction was held bad. True, the objection, while entirely logical, is a technical one, and as the other instructions given by the court were much more comprehensible than those given in the Wastl Case we should be loath to reverse this case on account of this instruction alone.

But the appellant complains of Instruction No. 6, which reads as follows: “You are instructed that a servant only assumes the risk of danger which is ordinarily incident to the character of work which he is engaged in performing, and such as an ordinarily reasonable man, with his experience, could have, or might have, in .the exercise of ordinary diligence and observation, discovered. ’ ’ This instruction does not embody a correct principle of law. It is impossible to read the language employed without arriving at the conclusion that the jury were told thereby that the doctrine of assumed risk involved but one proposition, to-wit, that the servant only assumed the risks ordinarily incident to the character of his employment, and, as qualifying and restricting that obligation, only such as a reasonable man with his experience could have or might have, in the exercise of ordinary diligence and observation, discovered. A servant tacitly agrees, by virtue of the contract of employment, to encounter and assume the ordinary risks incident to the service. (Cummings v. Helena & L. S. & R. Co., 26 Mont. 434, 68 Pac. 852.) The court, by instruction No. 6, told the jury that the risks assumed by the servant as ordinarily incident to the character of his work, were only such as an ordinarily reasonable man, with his experience, could have or might have, in the exercise of ordinary diligence and observation, discovered.

[165]*165Judge Bailey, in his work on Personal Injuries Relating to Master and Servant, in section 459; lays down the rule thus: “The rule embraces within its scope not only such risks as are incident to the business, but such risks as should become apparent to the employee by ordinary observation or are readily discernible by a person of his age and capacity, in the exercise of ordinary care, or where his means of knowledge are equally as great as those of his employer,-or if he discovers the unusual risk and makes no complaint. In such circumstances even extraordinary risks may assume in legal effect the shape and proportions of only ordinary and incidental perils, adding nothing to the liability of the master and affording the servant no additional grounds for recovery in the event of injuries received.”

A partial statement of the rule is found in McCabe v. Montana Central Ry. Co., 30 Mont. 323, 76 Pac. 701, where this court said: ‘ ‘ The authorities hold that the plaintiff is to be held as having assumed the ordinary risks of the business, but not any extraordinary risks, unless it appear that he was aware of such at the time of his employment, or that, upon learning of their existence, he continued in the employment after the lapse of a reasonable time for the defects to be remedied or removed.”

It was decided in Coulter v. Union Laundry Co., 34 Mont. 590, 87 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
92 P. 477, 36 Mont. 157, 1907 Mont. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leary-v-anaconda-copper-min-co-mont-1907.