Millen v. Pacific Bridge Co.

95 P. 196, 51 Or. 538, 1908 Ore. LEXIS 76
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 28, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 95 P. 196 (Millen v. Pacific Bridge 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
Millen v. Pacific Bridge Co., 95 P. 196, 51 Or. 538, 1908 Ore. LEXIS 76 (Or. 1908).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Commissioner Slater.

1. The averment of the complaint is that plaintiff’s intestate was, on April 20,1906, in the employ of defendant. The particular services he was to perform for defendant are not stated, but it is alleged generally that he was instructed to assist in completing the sewer between East Seventh street and Thompson street. The answer admits that the relationship of master and servant existed between defendant and plaintiff’s intestate on April 20, 1906, but denies the alleged instruction to assist in the completion of the sewer between those streets, and affirmatively alleges that on that day “plaintiff’s intestate with other employees was engaged by defendant to remove said remaining bank of dirt to the depth of 27 feet, and said deceased and other employees engaged at the same work were directed in digging said remaining body of earth to carry the face of the embankment where said tunnel was to be located down perpendicular, and not to disturb the face of the standing bank.” Hence there is an issue as to the scope of the employment, which must be [547]*547determined before other matters can be considered. The bill of exceptions recites that “it is stipulated and agreed between the parties hereto that the testimony offered by the plaintiff in support of the issues on his part tending to show * * that on the 19th day of April, 1906, the deceased, J. H. Larsen, was employed by the defendant to work, shoveling dirt in the ditch for the sewer at a point just east of Seventh street at Thompson street; * * that plaintiff introduced witnesses who testified that the deceased and his fellow workmen had orders from Mr. O’Neil, superintendent for the defendant, who had charge of the work and the direction of the men employed, to commence digging the tunnel into the face of the embankment on the east side of Seventh street, he (O’Neil) having first indicated on the face of the embankment where the tunnel was to be dug.” This evidence is undoubtedly sufficient to support the issue on plaintiff’s part as to the scope of the employment, and that the injury was received by Larsen while he was in the performance of the duties of his employment in a place directed by the defendant for him to work. And upon the issue of contributory negligence this evidence is sufficient to take the case to the jury.

2. Defendant’s main contention, however, is that plaintiff’s intestate assumed all the risks incident to the employment, and all extraordinary dangers and hazards of which he had knowledge and appreciated; while plaintiff rests his case wholly upon the rule of law which requires an employer to use reasonable care and diligence to .provide his employees with a reasonably safe place in which to work. There is no controversy over the rule that it is the personal and absolute duty of the master to exercise reasonable care and caution to provide his servants with a reasonably safe place to work; but it is urged by defendant that the master is not an insurer of the safety of the servant, and therefore is not bound to furnish an appliance or machinery or a place that is absolutely safe, [548]*548and that his duty in this regard is discharged when he exercises reasonable care and caution to that end, and the presumption is that he has discharged his duty. This may be conceded to be the law: Duntley v. Inman, 42 Or. 334 (79 Pac. 529: 59 L. R. A. 785).

3. And where a servant is employed to work in a mine, quarry, tunnel, pit, trench or other excavation, the master owes the duty to use ordinary and reasonable care and diligence to make his place of work as reasonably safe as the nature of the work admits. Where, however, it is the duty of the workmen to shore up or otherwise make safe the place as the work progresses, the master’s duty is fulfilled when he furnishes them with suitable materials for the purpose: 26 Cyc. 1119. The evidence discloses that Larsen, plaintiff’s intestate, was employed by defendant on the 19th of April as a common laborer to shovel dirt and assist in that capacity to dig a trench for the construction of a sewer. At that time the trench on Thompson street lacked about 8 feet of being completed. On the 20th he assisted in digging out a portion of this eight feet of earth. At different places, and wherever needed, defendant had previously shored up and protected with timber the banks or walls of this trench to prevent it from falling or caving upon its employees while they were engaged at work therein. This had been done by one of its servants employed for that particular duty, and was not required to be done by those engaged to dig and shovel dirt. But no supports or timbers had been placed across the perpendicular wall or bank at the end of this open trench where the tunnel was to begin, excepting one brace which had been placed about 3 feet from the top of the bank, but slightly removed from it; the intention being to put lagging or planks behind it to hold the earth in place, but this was not done. On the next day, when Larsen returned to work, he and another employee were directed to begin digging into the face of this bank. They had been working about three hours when a quantity of [549]*549earth broke off the face of the bank just above and at the entrance of the tunnel, fell on Larsen, and so injured him that he soon thereafter died. The testimony is conflicting as to how far into the bank the tunnel had been excavated when the accident occurred, but it is stated by some witnesses for plaintiff that its extreme depth was six feet. All agree that it was six feet high and six feet wide, presumably the intended dimensions of the tunnel when completed. At the time of receiving the injury Larsen could not have been entirely within the tunnel, but was just at the entrance thereof, for the body of falling earth came from the northeast corner of the “face” or entrance thereof, and, according to the testimony of J. S. Reagan, defendant’s witness, the bulk of it came from the bank above the entrance and extended from the surface of the ground down to the roof of the tunnel. The place where Larsen was put to work had been created by defendant before it employed him, and that it was a. dangerous place the casualty establishes. There is evidence that the defendant knew, or was 'bound to know, of the imminence of that danger. It is contended by defendant, however, that the danger was so apparent, open, and manifest that a person of ordinary intelligence could observe and appreciate it, and that Larsen, when he first entered the trench, then about 25 or 26 feet deep, must have seen that the end thereof was not shored, and that to dig into the base of a perpendicular bank of that height and undermine it would cause the unsupported part above to fall upon and injure him; that this danger was so apparent and obvious to him that the law will not permit him to deny knowledge of the ordinary and universal law of nature—the law of gravity.

4. The doctrine of assumption of risk is wholly dependent upon the servant’s knowledge, actual or constructive, of the dangers incident to his employment. Where he knows, or in the exercise of reasonable and ordinary care should know, the risks to which he is ex[550]*550posed, he will as a rule be held to have assumed them; but where he either does not know, or knowing, does not appreciate such risks, and his ignorance or nonappreciation is not due to negligence or want of due care on his part, there is no assumption of risk: 26 Cyc. 1196; Roth v. N. P. L. Co. 18 Or. 205 (22 Pac. 842); Carlson v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 P. 196, 51 Or. 538, 1908 Ore. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/millen-v-pacific-bridge-co-or-1908.