Hughes v. Fagin
Hughes v. Fagin
Opinion of the Court
This was an action for damages for an injury alleged to have accrued from the negligence of the defendant in employing an unfit and incompetent fellow-servant of the plaintiff, through whose carelessness the injury was inflicted. At the close of the plaintiff’s evidence the court directed the jury that the plaintiff could not recover. Thereupon the plaintiff took á nonsuit, and, having moved unsuccessfully to have the same set aside, appeals to this court.
The petition alleges, in substance, that the plaintiff was employed at work on a building in process of erection, belonging to the defendant; that in the building there was an elevator, which was operated by a boy employed by the defendant for that purpose ; that this boy was careless and negligent, and was an improper and dangerous person to intrust with the operation of the elevator; - that the plaintiff, while at work in the elevator shaft, was struck by the elevator and injured in consequence of the negligence and carelessness of the boy then operating it, — which negligence consisted in lowering it at' full speed, instead of a reduced speed, as he should have done, knowing that the plaintiff was at work in the shaft; and, also, in not giving the plaintiff any warning that he was about to lower it. The answer was a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence.
The plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that he was employed by the defendant’s foreman to work as a carpenter in the defendant’s building on Olive street in the
The plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that, when he received the injury, the elevator was at the top of the shaft at the level of the eighth floor, and was standing still; that the plaintiff, in the course of his employment as a carpenter, commenced to do some work on the elevator shaft, and. in so doing, leaned a portion of his body inside of the shaft; that the boy commenced lowering the elevator at full speed without giving him the warning, which he had been accustomed to give when lowering the elevator, knowing that persons were at work in the shaft; that, being absorbed in his work and being in a position where he could not well observe, he did not see or hear that the elevator was descending until it struck him, injuring him severely.
We apprehend, from a reading of the testimony, that the ruling of the learned judge in nonsuiting the plaintiff could not have been based on the theory of contributory negligence, It seems to us that it was a fair question for the jury, under all the circumstances, whether the plaintiff was negligent in leaning any portion of his body inside the elevator shaft in doing the work, and also in failing to observe the elevator when it descended.
We are of opinion that the plaintiff and the elevator boy were fellow-servants within the rule, which precludes a servant from recovering damages from his master for an injury happening through the negligence of a fellow-servant engaged in the same general employment. A well-known exception to this rule is, that the master is bound to exercise reasonable care in the selection of his servants, to the end that one servant shall not be subjected to unreasonable or unusual danger in consequence of the unfitness of a fellow-servant. Whenever a recovery of damages against the master takes place under this exception to the general rule, it is necessarily predicated upon the personal negligence of the master, or upon that of his vice-principal to whom he
The duty, which the master owes to his servant, of' exercising reasonable care in selecting fit and competent fellow-servants, is a duty of the same nature as the duty - which he owes to them of exercising the like care in selecting proper machinery and appliances to be used by them. On the other hand, if the servant, knowing the unfitness of a fellow-servant, elects to continue in the employment without complaint, he thereby releases any right of action for damages against the master, to the ' same extent and upon the same ground as where, knowing of a defect in a machine or appliance furnished him ■ by the master to be used, he continues to use it without complaint. Under former rulings of our supreme court, and of the courts of most other jurisdictions, if the defect in the fellow-servant or in the machine was equally apparent to the servant and to the master, the servant was deemed as matter of law to accept the risks of injury from such defect, as one of the risks of his employment; and, if injured in consequence of it, he could not recover damages from the master. This rule declined to recognize any inequality in the situation of the master and the servant, but placed them on an equal footing. It was analogous to the well-known rule in respect of contributory negligences under which any negligence on the part of the person injured, materially ’ contributing to the injury, was a bar to a recovery] of damages. But later decisions of our supreme court and of other courts seemingly recognizing the inequality in ■ the situation of the master and the servant, and, proceeding upon conceptions more just and humane, are to the effect that the servant is not, as matter of law, ’ deemed to accept the risks of injury from the unfitness ; of the fellow-servant, the machine, or the appliance, unless such unfitness is so glaring and palpable that a prudent man would not remain in the service; and that,
The constitutional amendment, adopted in 1884, relating to the appellate courts of this state, contains, in section 6, this provision : “The last previous ruling of the supreme court on any question of law- or equity shall, in all cases, be controlling authority in said courts of appei Is.” Whatever our individual views might be as to the proper rule upon this question, we are, therefore, constrained by the constitutional mandate to follow the last rulings of the supreme court. But, as this case has invoked a difference of opinion among the members of this court, I will take occasion to say for myself that, in my opinion, the recent rulings of our supreme court upon this question are more consonant with justice, and humanity than were,its previous rulings. They tacitly recognize, although they may not state it in express terms, the unequal situation of the
A majority of the court have been constrained to proceed upon this view, in respect of a defective appliance furnished by the master to his servant, in the case of Fugler v. Bothe, 43 Mo. App. 44. The views upon which we proceeded in that case are strictly applicable in the decision of this case, the only difference being that there the negligence of the master, if any, consisted in subjecting the servant to the danger of a defective appliance, while here it consists in subjecting him to the danger of an unfit fellow-servant.
The judgment will accordingly be reversed, and the cause remanded..
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). — Assuming as the opinion concedes that the boy running the elevator was a fellow-servant of the plaintiff, I cannot construct any theory of the evidence, which would have justified a submission of the case to the j ury. The plaintiff, according to his evidence, was an expert journeyman of eight years’ experience in elevator work, thoroughly familiar with the method of running elevators, and the incident dangers of such work. It is not shown that the defendant had any knowledge or experience in the matter. The carelessness of the boy was well known to the plaintiff, as he worked on this elevator shaft while the boy ran the elevator for a period of at least one week, and probably much longer. While ther£ is some evidence that the defendant at times saw how the elevator was run, it is always coupled with the additional statement that, whenever the defendant was present, the boy was more careful. The observation made in the opinion that an employe is under no obligation to call the negligence of his fellow-servants to the attention of his employer, because he might thereby incur the danger of being discharged, strikes me as not resting on a sound moral basis. It seems to me that such an act of an employe, being the discharge of a simple duty on his part, which he owes alike to his employer, to his fellow-servants and to himself, would meet with the commendation of every humane man, and I see no reason for assuming that employers are as a class inhumane. Certainly, there is no evidence in the record that this defendant was so, because it stands conceded that he was constantly on the alert to watch over the. safety of his employes.
On the question of the plaintiff’s contributory negligence,' as a matter of law, the case is probably not quite so strong. But even on that question the following uncontroverted facts gre entitled to weight. The plaintiff was working in the sixth, story, and the elevator before it began to descend was in the eighth, which
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.