Larson v. Kieburtz
Larson v. Kieburtz
Opinion of the Court
In September, 1911, appellants were engaged in the construction of a reservoir at Seattle, and respondent was in their employ. This reservoir was being constructed on Beacon hill some distance south of the city, and in order to best assemble the material used in the construction, appellants built a tramway from tide water to the reservoir site. This tramway was about a half mile in length. Its eastern end was at an elevation of three hundred and eighteen
Respondent had been in appellants’ employ since the previous March. His work was to go over the track, see that it was in proper shape, making necessary repairs if he could, and if not, report the need to appellants. It was also his duty to oil the sheave wheels, the rollers and switch points,
There are numerous charges of negligence in the complaint, but in view of the answers of the jury to special interrogatories submitted to them, only one need be referred to, and that is that the jerking of the car “was caused by the careless, incompetent and negligent manner in which the engine in the power house was handled,” coupled with an allegation that the engineer then in charge of the engine was incompetent. In returning a general verdict in respondent’s favor, the jury, in answering the special interrogatories, found that the negligence of the appellants causing the injury was in the employment of “an incompetent engineer,” who “was incompetent in respect to not giving his entire attention to the handling of the engine when the cars in question were approaching to and entering the switches on the day of the accident,” and in “not checking sufficiently the velocity of the cars upon their advent at the switch.” Appellants in appealing allege a number of errors, but we think the case must be disposed of in reviewing but one of them, and that is, Did the trial court err in denying the motion for judgment notwithstanding the general verdict?
At the time of the accident, there were three men in the engine house, Stead the engineer, Jackson the fireman, and Hargreaves an inspector for the city. Respondent produced Jackson and Hargreaves to describe the conduct of the engineer at the time, and appellants produced Stead in their behalf. Jackson says that Stead and Hargreaves were
Assuming, however, since the jury have so found, that the engineer was not giving his entire attention to the engine as the cars approached the switch, and that he did not sufficiently check the cars as they entered the switch, it would establish the fact that, in failing so to do, he acted carelessly and negligently; and while his careless and negligent acts in these respects might have endangered the property of his employers, there was nothing to indicate that they were in any manner affecting the safety of any place in which respondent or other employees might be working. Respondent had no duty to perform which necessitated his riding upon this car. There is nothing in this case from which it can be held that it was the duty of the engineer to handle his engine for the purpose of protecting the safety of employees upon the car upon this trip. If respondent chose to get upon this car, it was his voluntary act, for his own convenience, and not in the discharge of any duty imposed upon him by appellants. These cars were not intended nor provided for employees to ride upon. If they
There is another legal barrier to any recovery by respondent. He and Stead were fellow servants under all testing rules. Stead was in no manner or degree respondent’s vice principal, neither in the character of his work nor under any authority conferred by the common master. Respondent’s duty was to inspect the tramway, keep it in proper repair, report needed repairs, oil the wheels and rollers, and other duties of a like nature, none of which took him upon the tramcars or necessitated his presence there. In the performance of this duty, he was frequently at the engine house when cars were ascending and descending, and had every opportunity to observe the attention Stead gave to his work and his manner of performing it. It might be presumed he paid no attention to Stead, because he knew that, so long as he kept within the path appellant had marked out for him to follow, Stead’s care or lack of it would in no wise affect him. We have recently held, in Lackey v. Big Creek Lumber Co., 70 Wash. 619, 127 Pac. 190, that, under the facts there developed, an engineer and fireman in the same engine room were not fellow servants ; but that because of the fact that the fireman was un
In White v. Kennon, 83 Ga. 343, 9 S. E. 1082, the engineer on a tramroad and a track-repairer were held to be fellow servants, a similar situation to that here disclosed. In Labatt on Master and Servant, § 498, note d et seq., many similar illustrations are given where the relation of fellow servants has been sustained.
Eor these reasons, we are of the opinion that the motion for judgment should have been sustained. The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded with instructions to dismiss the action.
Mount, C. J., Ellis, and Main, JJ., concur.
Fullerton, J., dissents.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- O. T. Larson v. G. J. Kieburtz
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Master and Servant — Injuries to Servant — Assumption or Risks — Assuming Dangerous Position. A tramway repairer assumes tbe risks where, for his own convenience, he rode on a loaded car not intended for passengers or employees to ride on; and he therefore cannot recover although the jury found that the engineer was negligent in the operation of the engine, his acts only endangering property and in no way affecting the safety of any place provided for employees to work. Same — Feixow Servants — Engineer and Track Worker on Tramway. An engineer operating a tramway engine and a tramway repairer, whose duty frequently took him to the engine house where he had every opportunity to observe the engineer in his work, are fellow servants, in regard to work in which the repairer was not under the control of the engineer, and with respect to matters not affecting the safety of the working plaee. Fuixerton, J., dissents.