Swift & Co. v. Hatton

97 S.E. 788, 124 Va. 426, 1919 Va. LEXIS 134
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 16, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 97 S.E. 788 (Swift & Co. v. Hatton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swift & Co. v. Hatton, 97 S.E. 788, 124 Va. 426, 1919 Va. LEXIS 134 (Va. 1919).

Opinion

Sims, J.,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the following opinion of the court:

The pivotal question in the case before us is this:

1. Had the dangerous condition of the instrumentality —the pork barrel—at the time of the injury to the plaintiff — (all set forth in the above statement of the facts)—existed for so long a time and under such circumstances that the defendant had constructive knowledge thereof a sufficient length of time prior to the accident for it to have removed such condition by the exercise of reasonable care?

The case involves an instrumentality in itself safe for the purpose for which it was provided by the master to be used and for which.it was used by the injured servant in the due course of the discharge ox the duties of his employment; but which was converted into an unsafe and dangerous instrumentality by the position in which it was placed for such use.

[1-6] The general rule is well settled, that the master is under an absolute obligation—is charged with a nonassignable duty—to use due care in providing and maintaining a reasonably safe environment for his servants while engaged in their work; and since, although the instrumentalities which are provided by the master are in themselves safe if properly placed and used, delinquencies [436]*436of co-servants in the discharge of the duties entrusted to them may render the environment or place of work unsafe, it is, in such case, a continuing non-assignable duty of the master to exercise reasonable care, “* * by proper supervision and superintendence, to keep himself informed as to the manner in which the duties entrusted to them” (the-co-servants) “are performed.” N. & W. Ry. Co. v. Nuckols” Admr., 91 Va. 193, 207-8, 21 S. E. 342, 347, 2 Labatt on Master and Servant, sec 585. But it is also well settled, that there are limits to the master’s obligation of supervision and superintendence just stated. For instance, “he is not bound to supervise the merely executive details of the work to be done by his servants,” during the very progress of the work. 2 Labatt on Master and Servant, sec. 586. He is not bound to protect the servant from transitory-perils due to “no fault of plan or construction or lack of repair and to no permanent defect or want of safety in the. defendant’s works, or in the manner in which they had been ordinarily used.” Idem. sec. 587. Nor from dangers caused by the frequent changes in the progress of the work.. Idem. sec. 588. Nor from dangers due to the preparation oreare of the instrumentality, where such preparation and care of the instrumentality are a part of the work which the injured servant or his co-employee undertook to do.. Idem, sec 589. Nor “where the delinquent co-servant may have handled or placed a safe instrumentality so carelessly as to convert it, for the time being, into an injurious agency.. Idem. sec. 590 sub-sec. (a.) There is of course, as is also •well settled, a further limitation upon the non-assignable-duty of the master of supervision and superintendence, and-that is that such duty does not exist where the danger in question is known to the injured servant or is so open and obvious that he is presumed to have knowledge of it,, under the settled rules of law on that subject, and is taken to have assumed the risk of such danger. But when the-[437]*437danger is not known or open and obvious, the other limitations above mentioned merely suspend the continuing duty of supervision and superintendence aforesaid resting upon the master during such time as such an abnormal condition may be reasonably anticipated by the injured servant to exist without the knowledge of the master. During such time the injured servant assumes the risk of the result of the negligence of his co-servants in the discharge of their executive duties in the premises. Idem. sec. 591. Such duty of the master, however, cannot be permanently abrogated or discontinued by his entrusting executive details of the work to his servants. He owes a duty to his servants, as aforesaid, to exercise reasonable care to keep himself informed how the executive duties entrusted to them have been performed by their co-servants. Hence, if such an abnormal condition, which causes the injury to a servant, is not merely temporary, but has continued for such a length of time that the master has actual or constructive knowledge of it and he has, nevertheless, allowed it to remain in that condition without taking reasonable steps for the protection of his servants from the danger attendant upon such condition, he is liable. And this is true also in other cases, independently of the cause of the abnormal condition, as when it is the result of an act of a stranger, or of a fellow-servant who is not a vice-principal, or of the operation of extraordinary physical force, or to some circumstance which is left wholly unexplained. 1 Labatt on Master and Servant, sec. 129; 2 Idem. sec. 568.

[7] The duty of inspection of such an instrumentality which is incumbent on the master, rests upon precisely the same principles and exists under the same circumstances as does the duty of supervision and superintendence, as aforesaid. 1 Idem. sec. 155.

[8] Now in the instant case the question of fact as to [438]*438whether the danger in question was open and obvious was submitted to the jury under instruction No. 4 given at the request of the defendant (which is quoted in the statement preceding this opinion). There was ample evidence to sustain a finding of the jury that the danger was not open and obvious, so that that question was concluded in favor of the plaintiff'by the verdict of the jury.

[9] The question whether the dangerous condition of the barrel had existed for such a length of time that the master had constructive knowledge of it, was submitted to the jury under instruction No. 1 given at the request of the plaintiff (also quoted in the above statement). There was ample evidence to sustain an affirmative finding of the jury on that question. If the barrel was originally properly placed, and was subsequently misplaced by some co-servant of the plaintiff by a negligent discharge of executive duties touching the details of the work—the possibility of which is suggested in the testimony of Mr. Whit-ten for the defendant—still, according to Whitten’s own testimony it was his duty “to put it báck.” It was a question for the jury whether if he had gone about the discharging of that duty in a reasonable time he would have ascertained the dangerous position of the barrel—and also whether if the assistant superintendent had discharged his reasonable duty in the premises he would have ascertained the position of the barrel. Hence that question of fact also was concluded in favor of the plaintiff by the verdict of the jury.

(According to the evidence in the case it was a concessum that the defendant allowed the dangerous condition to remain without taking any steps for the protection of Its servants therefrom.)

[10] It is true that said instruction No. 1 also predicated the liability of the defendant upon the alternate fact, if the jury should so find, that the barrel in question was [439]*439originally placed in the unsafe position aforesaid.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 S.E. 788, 124 Va. 426, 1919 Va. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swift-co-v-hatton-va-1919.