DocketNumber: No. 4,510
Citation Numbers: 1921 Mont. LEXIS 57, 61 Mont. 471, 202 P. 766
Judges: Brantly, Cooper, Galen, Holloway, Reynolds
Filed Date: 12/5/1921
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of defendant. At the close of plaintiff’s evidence in rebuttal, the defendant moved for an instructed verdict upon the ground that the evidence of defendant’s negligence was insufficient to take
The complaint alleges that defendant negligently and carelessly caused and permitted piles and pieces of scrap iron, piston rods, unused material, and refuse to accumulate around and about the place at which it was the duty of its machinists and their helpers, including the deceased, to perform repair work; that the defendant knew of the dangerous, unfit and unsuitable condition so created, and existing, or, in the exercise of reasonable care could have known thereof; that the deceased was not aware, nor by the exercise of reasonable and ordinary care, in pursuit of his employment as machinist’s helper could be expected to learn of such condition; that while the latter was engaged in attempting to remove a certain chain from a heavy and cumbersome locomotive wheel, he stumbled and fell, or was thrown by reason of stepping backward into the pile of scrap iron, piston rods, and unused material and refuse, so negligently left there by defendant, and sustained injuries from which he subsequently died.
In another paragraph of the complaint it is alleged that the scrap iron, piston rods, and unused material over which, deceased stumbled, fell and received his injuries were partly covered and concealed by snow, so that it was difficult, if not impossible, for him to have ascertained their presence by visual inspection of the place upon and over which he was obliged to move in order to release the chain from the rim of the driver.
The answer and reply thereto present the following questions: Was the defendant guilty of negligence? Did the deceased assume the risk? Was he guilty of contributory negligence, or did he bring the injury upon himself, exclusively by his own negligence? Since in our opinion the last inquiry must be answered in the affirmative, it is the only one it is necessary to notice.
The evidence ' given upon the trial disclosed the following
On the morning of January 8, immediately after 7 o’clock, and at approaching daylight, while deceased was in the act of removing the chain from around the rim and tire as it was left the night before, the tire fell over and upon him, crushing him so severely that his death resulted the following evening between 5 and 6 o’clock. At the place of the accident machinery and equipment were kept piled in places between the tracks for the purpose of being “worked over again.”. Material that could not be used again was taken to the scrap pile. It was one of the places used by the defendant for “storing piston rods” and “usable” material, including new piston rods, just as they were purchased. As one of the plaintiff’s witnesses stated: “It was the regular place to keep them.” This space is described by Lars Villanger, another of plaintiff’s witnesses, and the helper who assisted the machinist and the deceased to put on the chain the night before, as follows: “A wooden platform with a bunch of tracks on it is lying between the roundhouse and the machine-shop. The wooden platform lies on the ground. It consists of two-inch planks. They lie close together. The tracks run north and south; I could not say for sure how many there were; about seven or eight. * * * At the point where this accident happened, the machine-shop wall was about nine feet from the rail. * * * The snow with reference to this nearest or west wall or these piston rods was about five feet from the rail. The snow and ice extends out about three feet to
John Laney, the nest witness, testified: “That was one of the places where the men worked when they had cause to work'out there.” His account of the happening is as follows: “When I first saw the tire it was tipping slightly, as anything would when pressing towards you, and he merely stepped back to brace himself. He had his hands on the tire.; stepped back trying to brace the tire. He was trying to hold over so it would not tip very much when I first seen him. When I first seen it, it wasn’t so overbalanced, but what he could have held it, if he could have held his feet. * * * I have handled those tires. They are not so awfully heavy that a man can’t brace a whole lot. I don’t mean a man can hold one of them, but if they don’t press too far towards him, he can brace it back. * * * Before he fell, I don’t know what was on the ground.” ■
Clarence Siegert, foreman of the store department at the time of the accident, testifying for defendant, described what he saw of it as follows: “When I first noticed Smith the tire was not beginning to fall. I saw him before the tire started to fall. I did not pay any particular attention to him, though, until the tire fell. I saw him before he started to fall, but that is when I noticed him the most in particular when it started, and he hollered for help. I didn’t see his feet trip and catch on anything. As he started back I didn’t notice his feet in particular, but I could see him there; that is, I thought that is how it happened that his feet caught, and that made him fall.”
By other testimony given by the plaintiff’s witnesses, the place of the accident was in the same condition when the tire fell as it had been left the night previous by the machinist, the deceased, and the other helper. What unbalanced the tire no witness ventured to say, because none of them saw it begin to fall. They could not therefore attribute Smith’s fall to
Interpreting the evidence all in plaintiff’s favor, and giving it the force of proven facts, it is impossible to escape the conviction that the accident was due solely to the reckless haste with which deceased went about the task of removing the chain, rather than the position of the piston rods, or the presence of snow and ice beneath his feet.
That the plaintiff produced upon the trial all the evidence available to support tbe charge of negligence in failing to provide her husband a safe place to work seems quite clear. Tet the proof not only failed to furnish debatable ground upon that phase of, the case, but went the other way far enough to establish the fact that the deceased brought the injuries upon himself by his carelessness in removing the chain, thus making escape from the falling tire impossible. Upon this outline of the evidence, we are forced to the conclusion that the efficient proximate cause of Smith’s injuries was the removal of the chain, while the tire was unbalanced in his hands, and not the negligence of the defendant in fail
“It is the rule,” says Chief Justice Brantly, “recognized
No amount of sympathy for the dependents of the unfortunate victim can be permitted to affect the application of this well-established principle to the facts as they are here presented.
The judgment is therefore affirmed.
’Affirmed.