Green v. Cudahy Packing Co.
Green v. Cudahy Packing Co.
Opinion of the Court
John Green, an employee of defendant, suffered injuries, September 24, 1913, which resulted in his death the following morning. Plaintiff, as administratrix of his estate, brought this action against his employer and recovered a judgment for $4,365, and defendant has appealed.
Plaintiff alleged that on the evening of the 24th of September, 1913, Green was required to work overtime and remained at his task until, after dark; that Green came to his death by reason of the carelessness and negligence of the defendant, in that, in order to leave the room where he was employed, through the customary and usual exit, he passed through an adjoining room, and thence down a stairway to the street; that, in the floor of this adjoining room through which he passed, the defendant had cut a large hole or opening about 20 feet square, that this opening was left unguarded, and the room unlighted, and that Green fell through the opening to his death.
The defendant answers, alleging that the hole or opening, as designated in plaintiff’s petition, was not in the floor of the building in which Green worked, but that it was cut in the floor of a separate building belonging to defendant; that Green was employed to work in the “new beef house,” and that this opening in the floor had been cut in the “old beef house,” and that the old beef house had been condemned several months before, and was on the opposite side of the roadway and about 50 feet distant from the new beef house, and that the hole or opening was about 60 feet in length and 15 feet in width; that the interior of the building was being
Defendant has made 63 assignments of error, but we shall not undertake to discuss them separately. Indeed, they do not require separate discussion. The principal point urged is that the petition alleged the opening in the floor was in a. room adjoining the room in which Green worked, and that the proof wholly failed to show an opening in the floor of any room adjoining this room. Laying aside technical distinctions, it may be said that plaintiff’s petition is based on the assumption that the room in the old beef house is a room adjoining the room in the new beef house, though there is a private alley running between the two buildings. Counsel for defendant would have us hold that it is not an adjoining room. There is no plat or drawing of either building pointed out in the record, but, if we understand the testimony of the witnesses, the Cudahy packing plant has many buildings. Among others are the buildings known as the old beef house, and the building known as the new beef house. As may be inferred from their designations, the old beef house was first erected. Later the new building was erected, and there are a few yards
Defendant takes the position that these matters are entirely immaterial; that “Green had no business there; that it was not a place where he was employed, nor where his employment required him to be; that the defendant owed him no duty with reference to the condition of the old beef house, and therefore could be guilty of no negligence toward him, no matter whether the railing was up or down on the morning that he was found in the old building.” Practically all of its assignments of error are based on this assumption. If defendant is correct in this, the judgment cannot stand. If it is not right in this assumption, there is little left of its assignments of error. Defendant argues that the proof fails to show any hole in the floor, as alleged in the petition; that this hole which we have described in the old building is not in a room adjoining the room in which Green Avorked. But we are not impressed with the logic of the argument. Perhaps the petition is more specific than is necessary. It might have been sufficient to allege that as he left the room where he was employed, passing over the usual route of exit, he fell into this hole, without saying that it was in a room adjoining the room in Avhich he worked. But it is evident both from the answer and the proof that all parties understood exactly the location of the buildings, the rooms, and the unguarded hole into which Green fell. No one was misled for a single moment. Defendant says there were
It is not only the duty of the employer to provide a reasonably safe place for his employees to work, but that duty carries with it the obligation to provide a reasonably safe ingress and egress. Of course, defendant argues that it did furnish a safe way of ingress and egress, and . that Green was guilty of negligence in attempting to make his departure through this old building. But where the employer has undertaken to furnish a number of such ways, and has kept them guarded and free from pitfalls, the employee may assume that he will continue to exercise such a degree of caution as is necessary to keep these ways safe for passage, and Green was not guilty of negligence in choosing the route, on that evening, which theretofore he had followed with perfect safety and which he might still have followed in safety had the guards been maintained around this opening.
We cannot undertake to discuss seriatim the numerous assignments made. If we were' to adopt defendant’s theory of the case, many of them would be good; but we do not adopt that theory, but hold that there is no material variance between the pleadings ’ and the proof, and that this opening in the floor of the old beef house is sufficiently designated in the petition, and, if it is not, the case is one of those falling within section 7706, Rev. St. 1913, providing: “No variance between the allegation in a pleading and the proof is to be deemed material unless it have actually misled the adverse party, to his prejudice, in maintaining his action or defense upon the merits.” It ■ follows that each of the assignments based upon this theory are without merit. This ‘ applies as well ’ to the ’ exceptions . taken to the instructions as to the rulings on the introduction of evidence. The jury were properly instructed. As to the instructions asked by the defendant, they áre for the most part based on a theory of the case which wé have heretofore said is not sustained, and they were therefore properly denied.
The verdict of the jury is fully sustained, the record is free from error., and the judgment is
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Sarah Green, Administratrix v. Cudahy Packing Company
- Status
- Published