Miller v. Paine Lumber Co.

227 N.W. 933, 202 Wis. 77, 1930 Wisc. LEXIS 214
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 23, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 227 N.W. 933 (Miller v. Paine Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Paine Lumber Co., 227 N.W. 933, 202 Wis. 77, 1930 Wisc. LEXIS 214 (Wis. 1930).

Opinions

The following opinion was filed December 3, 1929:

Owen, J.

This appeal raises the question of whether the court properly changed the answer of the jury to the question which found in effect that the defendant failed to furnish plaintiff a safe place of employment by reason of its failure to warn the plaintiff of the danger of doors falling off the trucks. Sec. 101.06, Stats., reads:

“Every employer shall furnish employment which shall be safe for the employees therein and shall furnish a place of employment which shall be safe for employees therein [81]*81and for frequenters thereof and shall furnish and use safety-devices and safeguards, and shall adopt and use methods and processes reasonably adequate to render such employment and places of employment safe, and shall do every other thing reasonably necessary to protect the life, health, safety, and welfare of such employees and frequenters. Every employer and every owner of a place of employment or a public building now or hereafter constructed shall so construct, repair or maintain such place of employment or public building, and every architect shall so prepare the plans for the construction of such place of employment or public building, as to render the same safe.”

The question immediately arises whether a failure to warn of dangers incident to the performance of service constitutes an unsafe place of employment within the meaning of this statute. It is apparent that a warning concerning dangers incident to the performance of specific duties within a given place works no change upon the physical aspects of the place where the work is to be performed. If the place was unsafe before, it continued to be unsafe after, the warning. The effect of the warning is to apprise the employee of the dangers incident to the performance of the service so that he may exercise care and caution for his own safety, which he might not exercise were he insensible to the danger. A mere reading of the statute reveals the dominant purpose of the legislation to have been to impose upon the employer the duty to furnish employees with a safe place to work in a physical sense. This seems to have been the view which the court took of the statute in Sadowski v. Thomas Furnace Co. 157 Wis. 443, 146 N. W. 770, where it said, speaking of the statute, at page 447: “the absolute duty was created of accomplishing physical results for prevention of industrial accidents,” which idea is further expressed at page 450 in the following sentence: “It would be very difficult to say, as matter of law, when the physical conditions and acts requisite to fully satisfy the statutory requirements appear conclusively by evidence.” True, the stat[82]*82ute was not being examined in that case with this thought in mind, but from these expressions appearing in the opinion it is plain that the court then considered the statute as one dealing with physical conditions only.

The statute was given more specific consideration, as far as this question is concerned, in Northwestern C. & S. Co. v. Industrial Comm. 194 Wis. 337, 216 N. W. 485, where it was held that in interpreting the phrase “and shall do every other thing reasonably necessary to protect the life, health, safety, and welfare of such employees and frequenters,” the doctrine of noscitur a sociis should be applied, and that the “every other thing” should be construed as meaning things of the same kind specifically recited in the statute immediately preceding its use, which are things relating to the physical situation of the place of employment. We hold that the duty to warn of dangers incident to the employment is not a duty imposed upon the employer by virtue of the so-called safe-place statute.

However, that duty exists independent of any statute, and the failure to perform such duty has long been recognized as a ground of the employer’s liability to an injured employee. It is a common-law duty and it has been in no respect modified by the legislation we are considering.

The trial court changed the answer of the jury to this question on the ground that the situation in which plaintiff was set to work imposed upon the defendant no duty to warn the plaintiff of the dangers arising from doors falling off the trucks. Because the common law, though not the statute, imposed upon the defendant the duty to warn the plaintiff of the dangers incident to his employment under certain circumstances, it is necessary for us to consider whether the. trial judge was correct in his view of the situation.

The trial court took the view, and it is so contended by [83]*83the respondent, that no duty to warn rested upon the defendant, because the danger of doors falling from the truck was as open and obvious to the plaintiff as to the defendant, and that the experience of the defendant furnished no reasonable ground for it to anticipate that an injury such as plaintiff sustained would result from such an occurrence. Though the plaintiff was a farmer and never worked at employment similar to that in which he was engaged at the time of the accident, nevertheless it must be assumed that he was cognizant of natural physical laws. He must be held to have known that if the top door of the truck became engaged with a door protruding from an adjoining truck load, it would be brushed from the top of his load and that by force of gravity it would fall; that it would be brushed to the back of the load where he was working, and that in such event it was quite likely to fall upon him. These things he certainly knew and the consequences he must have foreseen if he paused to consider. But he was not warned of any such danger. He had worked there ten days, during which time he had moved from 800 to 1,000 truck loads without anything of the kind happening. Neither his experience nor warnings from the defendant had encouraged a cautious or watchful disposition on his part. Now it affirmatively appears that such incidents do not frequently happen in the factory. However, that doors were occasionally brushed from the top of these loads does satisfactorily appear. A superintendent of the defendant testified that doors had been so brushed from the top of the truck loads about ten times during his experience of fifteen years in the factory, while a witness for the plaintiff testified that it had occurred about ten times in his experience in the factory of little less than two years. It matters little whether the greater credence be given to the evidence of the defendant or that of the plaintiff. From either it appears that although such accidents did [84]*84occur, they were very infrequent. Viewed in one light, it may be said that their infrequency imposed upon the defendant a greater duty to warn the plaintiff against such accidents. If they were of daily occurrence, the plaintiff would soon have had brought home to him from actual experience a knowledge of the dangers arising therefrom, in which case the warning would serve little purpose, as the danger would be as open and obvious to the plaintiff as to the defendant. While no doubt it was within the mental capacity of the plaintiff to arrive at the conclusion that a door might be brushed from the top of a truck, in which event it might fall upon and injure him, still there was nothing in the routine of his daily work to stimulate his reflections upon the subject. On the contrary, his experience tended to lend a sense of security to his position and to his work.

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Bluebook (online)
227 N.W. 933, 202 Wis. 77, 1930 Wisc. LEXIS 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-paine-lumber-co-wis-1930.