Sampson v. Holbrook

Decision Date21 June 1906
Citation78 N.E. 127,192 Mass. 421
PartiesSAMPSON v. HOLBROOK et al.
CourtUnited States State Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts Supreme Court
COUNSEL

Augustine J. Daly and Francis

J. Carney, for plaintiff.

Walter I. Badger and Wm. Harold Hitchcock, for defendants.

OPINION

MORTON J.

The evidence would have warranted a finding that Landry was a person whose sole or principal duty at the time of the accident was that of superintendence. But there was nothing to warrant, we think, a finding that the accident was due to any negligence on his part, or that of the general superintendent, or of the defendants.

On the night before the accident Landry had been directed by Logan the general superintendent, to take in, in the morning, a load of lumber that was out in the yard. The lumber consisted of seven sticks of hard pine 25 to 30 feet long and 12 inches square piled just as it had been left when unloaded. In the morning Landry took four or five men, including the plaintiff, and, with an engineer to run the derrick proceeded to move the timber. He directed some of the men, of whom the plaintiff was one, to hook on to one of the sticks which they did and then he 'told the engineer to go ahead and we swung it around a little ways.' When it got 'a little ways' he had them move the hooks back so as to give a chance to pull the whole stick round, and when one of the men, Bennett, said 'All right,' Landry told the engineer to go ahead. The stick swung towards a building and the plaintiff, who was on the inside between the stick and the building, jumped over the stick to keep from being caught between it and the building and was up against the pile when the stick struck the pile causing one of the timbers to fall and break his leg. The plaintiff was a carpenter and testified that he thoroughly knew the business and that he 'had for a long time been used to handling heavy timbers with a derrick.' There was nothing in the situation that was not as obvious to him as it was to Landry. He required no instruction or warning from Landry, or any one else. If the timbers were not piled as they should have been it was as plain to him as to any one. He and the men who were with him did in their own way the work which they were directed to do and it cannot be said that there was anything negligent in the way in which Landry undertook to move the timber or that he did or omitted to do anything which in view of the plaintiff's experience he...

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