Mann v. O'Sullivan

58 P. 375, 126 Cal. 61, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 677
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 13, 1899
DocketS.F. No. 751.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 58 P. 375 (Mann v. O'Sullivan) 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
Mann v. O'Sullivan, 58 P. 375, 126 Cal. 61, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 677 (Cal. 1899).

Opinion

GAROUTTE, J.

—This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries. The single question involved is, Does the complaint state a cause of action?

Defendant was the owner of a certain building in which she operated and maintained an elevator. As appears by the complaint “plaintiff was employed by said defendant to work for her in the capacity of a carpenter and to perform the work of inclosing the elevator shaft in said premises within a glass frame.” While working at this employment “said defendant, through her servant, agent, and employee, one Emmet Carney, carelessly "and negligently, and without any warning or notice .... to plaintiff, and against his positive instructions not to operate the elevator herein mentioned at any time without notice to him, suddenly operated .... said elevator .... from the ground floor, where said elevator was standing, so that said elevator suddenly struck with great force the screening on which plaintiff was working as aforesaid; .... *64 and that, by reason of the gross negligence and carelessness of said defendant in operating said elevator as aforesaid, said plaintiff sustained the injuries .... above mentioned.”

The important matter presented by this appeal arises upon the solution of the question as to whether or not the plaintiff and Carney, the man operating the elevator, were fellow-servants. In other words, these two men being employed by defendant, were they employed “in the same general business”? (Civ. Code, see. 1970.) It is impossible to declare a rule of law by which all cases presenting this interesting question may be weighed and tested. In that excellent work, the American and English Encyclopedia of Law, volume 7, page 864, it is said: “In the note will be found every authority, it is believed, determining who are and who are not fellow-servants, alphabetically arranged according to the various occupations or employments.” Yet, after a careful perusal of that note, we still find the same mist surrounding the question, and the legal atmosphere in no great degree clarified. The authorities are widely divergent, and the text-writers appear to be unable to agree upon a satisfactory rule by which it may be determined who are fellow-servants, or what servants are engaged in a common employment, or, as the statute of this state has it, what servants are employed “in the same general business.” Shear-man and Bedfield, in their work upon Negligence, declare the rule as favorably to the servant as it can be found in any standard work, and that rule is declared in section 236: “Under the generally prevailing rule, fellow-servants are engaged in a common employment when each of them is occupied in service of such a kind that all the others in the exercise of ordinary sagacity ought to be able to foresee, when accepting their employment, that his negligence would probably expose them to injury.” Testing this ease by the foregoing rule, the conclusion is irresistible that plaintiff, who was employed to repair the elevator shaft, and Carney, the man who was employed to operate the elevator, were servants of defendant, engaged in a common employment, or, as out statute has it, engaged “in the same general business.” It was plain to the plaintiff when he began work in repairing the elevator shaft that the negligence of Carney would expose him to great dan *65 ger. He recognized the fact that danger was present with him, for he instructed Carney not to raise the elevator without a notification to him, in order that he might first remove to a place of safety. The conclusion arrived at in many cases rests upon the principle that the danger from the negligence of another employee being fairly apparent, it should be held that all other employees assume the risk incident to that danger; and this principle forms the foundation of the rule which we have quoted from Shearman and Bedfield.

We will notice a few cases where the facts and principle invoked appear to be similar to those here presented. In Besel v. New York Cent. R. R. Co., 70 N. Y. 177, it is held that a car repairer working upon a car was in common employment with the men in charge of a train not connected with the car upon which the repairer was doing the work. To the same effect is Corcoran v. Delaware etc. R. R. Co., 126 N. Y. 673, and Campbell v. Pennsylvania R. R. Co. (Penn., Jan. 4, 1886), 24 Am. & Eng. R. R. Cas. 427. In Hasty v. Sears, 157 Mass. 123, 34 Am. St. Rep. 267, a case identical in its facts with the one before us, the court said: “The plaintiff and the elevator boy were both servants of the defendant at the time of the plaintiff’s injury, and, as their employment was a common employment, the negligence of the boy in running the car down upon the plaintiff was an obvious risk which the plaintiff assumed, and for which the defendant is not answerable to him. The plaintiff and the boy were both working to secure the súccessful operation of the elevator, the plaintiff in repairing it and the boy in operating the car, and they were forwarding a common enterprise for the benefit of the defendant, and were in a common employment.” In Fagundes v. Central Pac. R. R. Co., 79 Cal. 97, it is held that a laborer working upon the railroad track is a fellow-servant with a conductor and a track-walker. In Livingstone v. Kodiak Packing Co., 103 Cal. 263, it is held that the mate of a vessel and a waiter at the table are .engaged “in the same general business,” in the sense of those words as used in section 1970 of the Civil Code. The court declared that the general business of the defendant was the carrying of freight and passengers upon its steamer; that in the conduct of that business a waiter was as necessary an employee as a mate, and both were essentially *66 necessary for the proper conduct of the business. In the case at bar, it may be said that the business of defendant was operating and maintaining an elevator. A boy or man to manipulate it was a necessity, and likewise an engineer to handle the engine and furnish the power, and likewise a man to repair the machine itself when out of order. These men in their respective lines of vocation were necessary to the operation of the machine, and were assisting in the same general business of operating and maintaining the machine. The man to repair the elevator when it was out of order was as necessary as the waiter to the ship, or the repairer to the car, or the laborer to the railroad track. The allegation of the plaintiff that he was employed by the defendant in the capacity of a carpenter to do certain work for her, and that at the time he received the injury, complained of he was doing the work for which he was employed “under the direction of the defendant,” shows that he was not an independent contractor, and precludes him from invoking the principles declared in Bennett v. Trubody, 66 Cal. 510, 56 Am. Rep. 117. The defendant would have been liable to a stranger for any injury sustained by reason of his negligence upon the ground that he was the servant of the defendant.

It is also claimed that from the face of the complaint it appears that the accident occurred from the negligence of the defendant herself. The pleading does not bear this construction. After stating that the accident occurred by reason of Carney operating the elevator, the pleading then declares that “defendant did thereby negligently and carelessly precipitate with great force,” et cetera.

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Bluebook (online)
58 P. 375, 126 Cal. 61, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 677, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mann-v-osullivan-cal-1899.