Morelli v. Great Northern Railway Co.

300 P. 210, 89 Mont. 603, 1931 Mont. LEXIS 37
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 8, 1931
DocketNo. 6,745.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 300 P. 210 (Morelli v. Great Northern Railway 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
Morelli v. Great Northern Railway Co., 300 P. 210, 89 Mont. 603, 1931 Mont. LEXIS 37 (Mo. 1931).

Opinion

*607 MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS

delivered the opinion of the court.

John Morelli has appealed from a judgment of nonsuit entered against him on motion of the defendants in a personal injury action brought by him against the Great Northern Railway Company and James E. Martin, its roundhouse foreman at Havre, Montana.

The questions raised by the motion for nonsuit and by this appeal are as to the sufficiency of the complaint to state a cause of action, whether or not the record discloses a duty laid upon the defendants to protect the plaintiff, as a servant, in the manner and under the circumstances set out in the complaint, and as to the sufficiency of the evidence to require a submission of the cause to the jury.

The complaint alleges that plaintiff was a boilermaker in the employ of the defendant company and working *608 under the supervision of defendant Martin, and that his duties required him at times to enter the fire-boxes of engines to make repairs and therein to use an air-hammer provided by the defendants. It is then alleged that “it was the duty” of the defendants to provide the plaintiff with a reasonably safe place in which to work and to supply him with reasonably safe tools and appliances with which to perform his duties and, in the performance of that duty, it was “necessary” that defendants provide plaintiff with goggles so constructed that they could be worn while using the air-hammer and which would reasonably protect plaintiff’s eyes from flying pieces of metal resulting from the use of the hammer. It is then alleged that plaintiff was required to enter the fire-box of an engine which was in a “very heated condition,” there to calk certain stay-bolts, under which condition only goggles equipped with fine screen lenses or lenses of glass properly ventilated “can be worn”; but that, instead of furnishing such goggles, defendants negligently and carelessly provided plaintiff with a pair of goggles “equipped with glass lenses encased in so-called leather side shields, fitting closely to the cheek and temple, and without ventilation to permit air to pass between the lenses and the eyes,” on account of which and the heated condition of the fire-box “moisture gathered upon the lenses, * * • rendering them unusable,” and that the accident complained of was due to and caused by the negligence of defendants in not providing plaintiff a reasonably safe place in which to work and with proper goggles. It is further alleged that defendants knew, or by the exercise of reasonable care should have known, that in the heated fire-box and in the work to be performed, plaintiff’s eyes were in danger from flying bits of steel, and that the goggles furnished could not be worn under the conditions existing.

In describing the injury received, plaintiff alleges that, on August 12, 192'6, in the course of his duties, he was required to enter the heated fire-box of an engine for the purpose of calking stay-bolts by the use of the air-hammer, and before the operation was fully performed and “at a point where it *609 was impossible for plaintiff to cease using said hammer” by reason of the conditions described, the goggles furnished clouded over, so that it was impossible for plaintiff to use them and he was compelled to remove them in order to complete the work, as a result of which a piece of steel struck him in the left eye, resulting in a total loss of sight of the left eye and great impairment to the sight of the right eye.

The answer denies that defendant company was in duty bound to furnish plaintiff with goggles or that he was ordered or directed to enter the fire-box while it was still in an overheated condition, and alleges that if such was the condition, he should have waited until it had cooled off sufficiently to enable him to work with greater ease and comfort, and that the overheated condition of the fire-box was not a proximate cause of any injury sustained by plaintiff. It alleges that the rules of the company require boilermakers, while engaged in such work, to wear goggles and that plaintiff violated its rules in removing his goggles while using an air-hammer, and that the goggles in question “had been personally selected” by plaintiff.

As separate defenses, defendants allege assumption of risk and contributory negligence, and further that the injury resulted proximately and solely from plaintiff’s careless and reckless operation of the air-hammer without goggles, in violation of the rules and regulations of the company. Issue was joined by reply. ■

1. While the mere conclusions of the pleader that certain duties devolved upon the defendants amount to nothing, the complaint contains allegations as to the conditions under which plaintiff is alleged to have been required to work and the necessities thereunder, which, if as a matter of fact it was the duty of the defendants to furnish goggles, render the complaint sufficient. (Johnson v. Herring, 89 Mont. 156, 295 Pac. 1100.)

2. There is no question but that it is the duty of the master to furnish the servant with a reasonably safe place in which to work and with reasonably safe tools and appliances *610 with which to perforin the duties imposed upon him. But the heated condition of the fire-box added no element of danger to the work being performed, other than the generation of steam causing moisture to collect on the lenses of the workman’s goggles, and this condition is shown only in connection with the alleged duty to furnish a type of goggles which would not readily yield to this condition. The question raised is whether or not “goggles” are “tools and appliances” within the meaning of the general rule, or “appliances, machinery” within the meaning of section 6605, Revised Codes 1921.

The authorities generally declare the negative, but we need not here decide the question. (See Burns v. Delaware Tel, Co. 70 N. J. L. 745, 67 L. R. A. 956, 59 Atl. 220; Emerson-Brantingham Co. v. Growe, 191 Ind. 564, 133 N. E. 919; Stapleton v. Reading Co., 26 Fed. (2d) 242; Kolbow v. Haynes-Langenburg Co., (Mo. App., not reported), 3 S. W. (2d) 226; 4 C. J., “Appliances,” 1379.)

Conceding for the purposes of this opinion, but not deciding, that, either on general principles or, having furnished goggles for two years, the duty devolved upon defendants to furnish plaintiff with reasonably safe goggles, does the record disclose facts showing a breach of that duty and that such negligence 'was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury?

3. The testimony on behalf of plaintiff is to the effect that the rules of the company required boilermakers to wear goggles while using the air-hammer on steel, which rule was well known to plaintiff, and that for two years the company had furnished the men with goggles; that it had changed the type from time to time in an effort to secure the best type; that all known types would accumulate moisture under such conditions as those described in the complaint, and the wearers were frequently compelled to wipe the lenses off with their handkerchiefs.

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Bluebook (online)
300 P. 210, 89 Mont. 603, 1931 Mont. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morelli-v-great-northern-railway-co-mont-1931.