Nixon v. Selby Smelting & Lead Co.

36 P. 803, 102 Cal. 458, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 668
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 16, 1894
DocketNo. 15204
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 36 P. 803 (Nixon v. Selby Smelting & Lead Co.) 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
Nixon v. Selby Smelting & Lead Co., 36 P. 803, 102 Cal. 458, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 668 (Cal. 1894).

Opinion

Vanclief, C.

Action to recover damages for a personal injury alleged to have been suffered by plaintiff while in the employ of defendant, in consequence of the neglect and failure of defendant to provide proper and safe instruments and appliances with which plaintiff was employed to work.

The trial was by jury, and the verdict and judgment was in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of three thousand eight hundred and sixteen dollars.

The plaintiff was employed to work, and at the time he was injured was working, in a room called the “ silver-room,” in which silver is separated from lead and gold by dissolving it in hot diluted sulphuric acid, and then precipitating it from the solution. In this process the solution passed through three adjoining tanks, in the last of which the silver is precipitated, and from which, after the precipitation, the hot diluted acid is pumped through a rubber hose into what is called the “ waste-tank.” While the plaintiff was using this hose in the usual manner it parted at a point between the tanks, and the hot acid was thereby discharged upon the plaintiff’s shoulder and back, and scalded him severely. There were four sets of tanks in the silver-room, the waste acid from all of which was pumped into the same waste-tank; but only three of the sets were ordinarily [461]*461used at the same time. On the day of the accident, however, all were used, and the waste acid from all four was to be pumped into the waste-tank at the same time; but there were only three hose in the silver-room through which to pump it. Under these circumstances, Mr. Helm, the foreman of the silver-room, extemporized a fourth hose by connecting two pieces of old hose that had been lying in the silver-room for a long time, after having been used for conducting steam into the tanks, for which purpose only short hose was necessary. The two pieces of old hose were connected by slipping one end of each over a piece of lead pipe about eight inches long, so that the two ends met near the middle of the piece of pipe, but were not tied or otherwise fastened to the pipe except by their elastic force, which depended partly upon their quality and partly upon the comparative size of the pipe and the orifice in the hose. About ten or fifteen minutes after plaintiff had commenced to use this hose, one of the connected pieces slipped from the lead pipe, with the result above stated.

It appears that these pieces of old hose were much worn and eaten by the acid in which they had been formerly used, and it is admitted by appellant that, without having been tightly bound to the lead pipe by a wrapping of wire or twine, they were unfit for the use to which Mr. Helm put them. The evidence is quite sufficient to justify a finding by the jury, that the plaintiff had no notice that this hose, as constructed and adjusted to the tanks by Mr. Helm, was defective, or that he exposed himself to any danger by using it. He was not present while Mr. Helm was connecting the two pieces, though Mr. Helm had told him that the hose to be used by him would be made by connecting the two pieces of old hose, and he knew when he commenced using it that it had been so made. He had not been regularly employed in the silver-room, but only occasionally, during the year preceding the accident. He had never before used, nor seen used, a spliced hose, but had implicit confidence that the hose prepared and [462]*462furnished by Mr. Helm, was sufficient for the use intended, and could be safely used.

Mr. Boff was general superintendent of the smelting works, and employed and discharged all the men. Under him Mr. Bee was superintendent of the silver-room. But Mr. Helm was foreman of all the men employed upon the tanks in the process of dissolving and precipitating silver, and was given power not only to direct the men employed in those processes, but to determine what implements and appliances should be used, especially for pumping the acids. As to this, Mr. Bee, on the part of the defendant, testified as follows: “All requisitions for materials and supplies in the silver-room come to me. Mr. Helm makes all requisitions to me, including rubber hose. Mr. Helm is the foreman in charge of those tanks—in the immediate supervision of them. All requisitions for rubber hose that he has made to me have been filled immediately. . . . Mr. Helm is the man who has that matter in charge.....When the tanks are to be drawn off I don’t generally superintend; that he does; that matter is always intrusted to him; the matter of drawing off the tanks is a matter he controls by his judgment.”

1. It is not questioned that the injury to plaintiff was caused by the negligence of Helm, but appellant contends that Helm was a fellow-servant of plaintiff, and therefore that the negligence of Helm was the negligence of a fellow-servant merely, and not that of the defendant corporation.

It must be admitted that, according to the firmly settled rule of law in this state, Helm, notwithstanding the higher grade of service in which he was employed, was a fellow-servant with plaintiff in so far as he served in the places, or with the machinery or appliances prepared and furnished by the defendant; and, for the consequences to fellow-servants of his negligence in the performance of such services in the places, or with machinery or appliances thus prepared and furnished, the defendant is not responsible. But in so far as Helm [463]*463was authorized and employed to prepare the places in which other servants were to work, or to furnish the machinery or appliances with which they were to work, he represented the corporate defendant, and his negligence in the performance of these services was the negligence of the defendant, for the injurious consequences of which to other servants, without their fault, it is responsible to the same extent it would have been if such places, machinery, and appliances had been prepared and furnished through the immediate agency of Mr. Hoff,"the general superintendent, or by Mr. Bee, the special superintendent, of the silver-room.

The reason of this is, that it is the duty of employers to provide and furnish suitable and safe appliances, such as rubber hose in this case, with which their employees are required to work; and the law does not permit employers to transfer or shift their responsibility for the performance of this duty to any agent or servant. Of course, they may employ agents or servants to perform this duty, but in case they do so, all negligence in the performance tlierof is, nevertheless, deemed their negligence, for w’hich they are responsible to a servant or employee thereby injured without contributory negligence on his part. In cases of this kind the agents of the employer who construct or furnish machinery or appliances to be used by employees are not, quoad hoc, fellow-servants, although at the same time they may be fellow-servants in the performance of other services. Perhaps the observance of this dual relation may reconcile some of the apparent inconsistencies of the cases in this state; but, however this may be, the principles and distinctions, as above stated, are expressly recognized in the later cases, and are consistent with all the cases in this state, except, perhaps, the cases of McKune v. California, Southern R. R. Co., 66 Cal. 302, and Brown v. Sennett, 68 Cal. 225, 58 Am. Rep. 8, which have been criticised and doubted, if not overruled.

In Daves v. Southern Pacific R. R. Co., 98 Cal. 20, one Bresnehan was the foreman of a gang of men, including [464]

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Bluebook (online)
36 P. 803, 102 Cal. 458, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 668, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nixon-v-selby-smelting-lead-co-cal-1894.