Vestner v. Northern Cal. Power Co.

110 P. 918, 158 Cal. 284, 1910 Cal. LEXIS 369
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 31, 1910
DocketSac. No. 1719.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 110 P. 918 (Vestner v. Northern Cal. Power 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
Vestner v. Northern Cal. Power Co., 110 P. 918, 158 Cal. 284, 1910 Cal. LEXIS 369 (Cal. 1910).

Opinion

MELVIN, J.

Plaintiff appeals from a judgment in favor of defendant in an action for damages for personal injuries. The appeal is on the judgment-roll alone. Plaintiff was employed by the defendant corporation as a lineman and was engaged with other workmen constructing a power line from Orland to Hamilton in Glenn County. The complaint alleged that plaintiff was directed by defendant to ascend a tree for the purpose of placing certain wires therein; that he climbed the tree as directed and while there was caught and injured by the falling of another tree which defendant negligently and carelessly cut without warning to plaintiff; that plaintiff was not familiar with the handling of wires in trees, such work being outside of his regular employment; that defendant failed to warn him of the dangers attendant upon the performance of his work, and particularly of the peril arising from the cutting of a tree near the one in which he was at work; and that by reason of defendant’s negligence he was injured.

The court found, however, that plaintiff was experienced in the kind of work he was performing and that, indeed, he was *286 a man of varied experience in several employments. There were also findings to the effect that plaintiff was ordered to ascend the tree by defendant’s field foreman, Stark, for the purpose of fastening a rope therein; that before he climbed it, while he was climbing it, and after he had ascended it, some of plaintiff’s fellow-servants were removing trees; and that said fellow-servants were also under the direction of foreman Stark. There was an additional finding to the effect that before going up into the tree plaintiff had requested Stark to have the work of cutting the other tree cease, but that Stark assured plaintiff that there was no danger. There was also a finding that there would have been no danger if the chopping had ceased at the time plaintiff made his request that Stark should order the other men to discontinue the work of cutting down the tree that afterwards fell and injured plaintiff. Additionally the court found that plaintiff went into the tree to tie a rope and that this was within the scope of his employment and that said tree was not a place of danger to plaintiff except as it was made so by the careless and negligent act of plaintiff’s fellow-servants in cutting down the tree that did the damage in its fall.

At the time of the occurrence of the unfortunate accident which was the basis of this action, section 1970 of the Civil Code was as follows: “An employer is not bound to indemnify his employee for losses suffered by the latter in consequence of the ordinary risks of the business in which he is employed, nor in consequence of the negligence of another person employed by the same employer in the same general business, unless the negligence causing the injury was committed in the performance of a duty the employer owes by law to the employee, or unless the employer has neglected to use ordinary care in the selection of the culpable employee.” Appellant mantains that under the duty enjoined by law upon respondent to provide a safe place for the prosecution of the work of its employees, the corporation was bound to insure Yestner against injury arising from the negligence of his fellow-servants in cutting the tree near the one into which he was directed by the foreman to go; and that Stark, the foreman, acted as a vice-principal in putting Yestner to work in a place made perilous by the operations of the other workmen.

We are unable to agree with this view of the ease. Yestner, *287 an experienced workman, was sent into a place not inherently dangerous. He knew that men were at work cutting on a neighboring tree. Of course he knew, as a matter of common experience, that if their work was continued sufficiently the tree would fall and might injure him. While the foreman assured him that there was no danger, he was in a position to see the extent of the cut which the woodchoppers had made. Seeing that, and estimating the probabilities, it is clear that he took the chance of finishing the particular duty of the moment before the tree should fall. The sole question in this case is this: Was the injury caused by defendant’s failure to perform a personal duty which it owed to plaintiff? Stark had control of the men engaged in the construction of the work, and it was the duty of plaintiff to obey his orders. There was no contention that he was incompetent, or that the corporation had not exercised due care in selecting and employing him as a foreman. The place which he had chosen for the plaintiff’s work was, as we have said, in itself a reasonably safe one. He was negligent in permitting the other tree to be cut down so that it fell upon and injured the plaintiff, but in this he was a fellow-servant of Vestner. Under the statute and authorities as they existed at the time plaintiff was injured, we can see no other conclusion. Since that time section 1970 of the Civil Code has been amended, but such amendment has no application to this case. The learned judge of the superior court filed an opinion in which he discussed some of the Californian cases upon this question, as follows:

“The defendant was engaged in mining gold at Sucker Plat, county of Tuba. The plaintiff was in its employ, and was engaged in picking dirt and gravel into the defendant’s ground sluice. The defendant was engaged in blasting rock on the mine. One Kegan was the foreman of all the work, and had the authority to employ and discharge hands. The plaintiff was struck by a rock thrown from a blast a distance of three hundred feet. He was exposed to injury by the blast, and it was by means of Kegan’s negligence that he was not notified that the blast was to be fired. It was held that the defendant was not liable. (McLean v. Blue Point Gravel Co., 51 Cal. 255.). That case was very much like the one at bar. In each case the foreman ought to have warned the plaintiff of the danger and failed to do so. Another similar case is that of *288 Daves v. Southern Pacific Co., 98 Cal. 19, [35 Am. St. Rep. 133, 32 Pac. 708]. The section foreman, who had the power to employ and discharge men, and had employed the deceased, opened a switch and ran a hand-car thereon, negligently leaving the switch open. The deceased was engaged in doing something about the hand-car and was under the end thereof when a train coming up ran into the open switch, colliding with the hand-car and killing the deceased. It was held that the death of deceased resulted from the negligence of a fellow-servant and that the defendant was not liable; that the place provided by the defendant was a safe place to work in the first instance and was rendered unsafe only by the negligent act of a fellow-employee. So it would appear in this case, if it was the duty of the defendant to furnish the place to work, that it was reasonably safe, and was rendered dangerous only by reason of the negligence of the fellow-employees of the plaintiff, in the act of cutting down the tree which injured him. In the case of Donnelly v. San Francisco Bridge Co., 117 Cal. 417, [49 Pac. 559], the facts were as follows: A pile had been driven too deep, and the plaintiff, with other men, was sent by the superintendent to lay a foundation for a jack-screw to raise the pile. This required the plaintiff to work under the pile driver.

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Bluebook (online)
110 P. 918, 158 Cal. 284, 1910 Cal. LEXIS 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vestner-v-northern-cal-power-co-cal-1910.