Erickson v. Monson Consolidated Slate Co.
Erickson v. Monson Consolidated Slate Co.
Opinion of the Court
This action was brought to recover damages sustained by the plaintiff from an accidental explosion of dynamite in the slate quarry of the defendant at Monson, Maine. The plaintiff was employed by the defendant company and at the time of the accident was engaged in operating a steam drill in drilling holes for the purpose of blasting out slate. The charge of dynamite which caused the accident had been left unexploded in a hole previously drilled by the defendant. This fact was not known to the defendant or to the plaintiff.
The plaintiff was under the supervision of his brother who had employed him ten days before and had instructed him how to operate the drill. The steam drill and boiler were connected by a rubber hose six or seven feet long so that holes might be drilled for a distance of the length of the hose and when drilling at such a distance the operator must leave the drill and go to the valve to turn on steam.
At the time of the accident the plaintiff had drilled six or seven holes and set his drill for another at about the full length of the hose
The relation of unaster and servant is contractual, and the law by presumption incorporates into the contract reciprocal duties. The master assumes the obligation to provide the servant with a reasonably suitable and safe place in which to perform his labor, having reference to the work in which he is engaged. Hopkins v. O’Leary, 176 Mass. 258; Buzzell v. Laconia Mfg. Co., 48 Maine, 113; Shanney v. Androscoggin Mills, 66 Maine, 420; Cunningham v. Bath Iron Works, 92 Maine, 501; he is also bound to warn an inexperienced servant of any particular danger incident to the occupation and to give him such instruction as shall enable him to decide with discretion whether he will assume the hazards of the employment. Welch v. Bath Iron Works, 98 Maine, 361; McMahon v. Ida Mining Co., 95 Wis. 308; McEllingott v. Randolph, 61 Conn. 157; Smith v. Peninsula Car Works, 60 Mich. 501. The law of master and servant requires of the servant the duty of using reasonable care, and of assuming ordinary risks incident to his employment including the negligence of a fellow servant, those which are obvious or which with reasonable care he ought to know and appreciate, and those pointed out by the master. This rule is consistent with justice and public policy. The master is in no sense an insurer of the safety of his servant and the law gives no indemnity against the consequences of recklessness. Mundle v. Hill Mfg., Co., 86 Maine, 400.
A corporation acts through its agents and the special duties under consideration devolve upon a vice principal. At the time of the accident the brother of the plaintiff who was in charge of the outside
The facility with which quarrying is done by the use of dynamite, makes it recognized as indispensable in carrying on the business. Its dangerous character requires a proportionate degree of care, but the legal standard is reasonable care. The alleged negligence of the defendant consisted not in using dynamite, but in allowing unexploded cartridges or portions of them to remain in holes in the pit of the quarry where the plaintiff was working. The holes left after the explosion could be seen when the debris was removed and it might be possible to explode them before other holes-were drilled, or to indicate .them by cautionary signals; but the omission of such precautions would not be negligence in law. The presence of these holes was an element of danger in the work. The defendant’s negligence must therefore depend upon the question of his duty to notify the plaintiff of the particular danger and of his fulfilment of this duty. If the plaintiff, from his experience gained in working about the quarry, ought to have known and appreciated the danger, no duty rested.upon the master to give him special warning. The instruction given him by the foreman “to set his drill as far as he could from the old holes and not to bother them,” were words not only of direction but of warning, but if they may be considered as in themselves not sufficiently definite to cause an inexperienced man to appreciate them as indicating a condition of danger, we think that the plaintiff in view of his general familiarity with the methods of blasting in this quarry, and the directions he had received, cannot recover in this action by reason of his contributory negligence. He was thirty years of age; he had been familiar with slate quarries part of the time for
Motion granted.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John C. Erickson v. Monson Consolidated Slate Company
- Status
- Published