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Fasekis v. Company

Supreme Court of New Hampshire Hillsborough
Dec 4, 1945
44 A.2d 817 (N.H. 1945)

Summary

applying prior law

Summary of this case from Mahan v. N.H. Dep't of Admin. Services

Opinion

No. 3552.

Decided December 4, 1945.

In an action at law for injuries sustained in the course of employment, the only right an employee has to claim immunity from the defense of assumption of risk is derived from the Employers' Liability Act (R. L., c. 216). In such case the plaintiff, in order to assert correctly that right, must either state in his declaration that his action is brought under the provisions of the Act or allege facts which so indicate. The employer is not required to disprove the existence of plaintiff's right of immunity from the defense of assumption of risk by virtue of the Employers' Liability Act (R. L., c. 216), unless the plaintiff either states in his declaration that his action is brought under the Act or alleges facts which so indicate. In a common-law action by a servant against the master, the burden of non-assumption of the risk is on the plaintiff. An employer's duty to warn extends only to dangers of which his employee is justifiably ignorant, and the employee assumes the perils incident to his service of which he is informed, or which ordinary care would disclose to him. An adult person of average intelligence was held to have assumed the risk involved in ascending and descending from a counter three feet high by using a stool two feet high where the appliances were visible and the danger arose solely from the conduct of the servant herself in placing the stool where she did. The violation of a penal statute is an actionable wrong only when the Legislature expressly so provides or when the purpose and language of the statute compel such inference. When a motion for a nonsuit is made upon an opening statement, such statement is to be treated as though the evidence offered had been introduced.

CASE, to recover for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff on September 15, 1941, while employed as a salesclerk in the defendant's department store in Manchester. At the conclusion of the opening statement of plaintiff's counsel to the jury, the defendant's motion for a nonsuit was granted subject to the plaintiff's exception. A summary of the opening statement follows.

The plaintiff was twenty-five years of age and had been employed by the defendant for about two years. She was working at the art goods counter when she received her injury. All counters in the defendant's store were rectangular in shape, and the salesgirls stood in the enclosures thus formed. The art goods counter was three feet high with a lip on each edge to prevent merchandise from slipping off. A rack for the display of goods was suspended by wires from the ceiling and came down to within five feet of the counter.

Just before the accident happened, a salesgirl came to the art goods counter and informed the plaintiff that one of the tablecloths on the display rack needed to be rearranged. It was one of the plaintiff's duties to see that her goods were properly displayed, and so, placing a stool "opposite the tablecloth," she stepped from the stool to the counter and readjusted the goods on the rack. She then "put one foot down there onto the stool" (to quote the words of plaintiff's counsel) "and just as she removed the other foot from the counter, the stool slipped and went out from under her." The stool was approximately two feet high.

The plaintiff had never been told not to use the stool, nor had she been instructed "how to get up to arrange the display."While working at another counter she had used a box for that purpose. She had not "climbed on stools before."

During the discussion of the defendant's motion for a nonsuit, plaintiff's counsel called to the Court's attention the fact that the lip on the counter "gave rise to a situation" in which the plaintiff's weight "would be coming down on to the stool at an angle," and that the plaintiff "wasn't familiar" with the effect that "stepping down from a counter to a stool" in that manner might have.

After the nonsuit had been ordered and the plaintiff's bill of exceptions allowed and transferred to this Court, defendant's counsel moved the trial Court "to amend the transferred case in this action by including therein" a statement to the effect that the defendant had accepted the provisions of the Employers' Liability and Workmen's Compensation Act and that this acceptance was in good standing on the date of the accident. A letter written by the Labor Commissioner certifying to these facts was offered in evidence. The Presiding Justice disposed of the motion as follows:

"Plaintiff objects to an amendment of the case, or to reopening the case, for the purpose of proving that defendant accepted the provisions of the Workmen's Compensation Act. Defendant offered competent evidence that it had accepted the Act on the date of the alleged accident. Plaintiff objected, not to the form of the evidence, but to the materiality of the evidence, contending that it should only be admitted as part of the defendant's case at the trial, and that since that stage of the proceedings had not been reached when the Court ordered a nonsuit on the opening statement, it should not be admitted now. Plaintiff's objection is sustained. The Court was in error in granting a motion for nonsuit on the opening statement on the ground that the offer of proof outlined in the opening statement clearly demonstrated that plaintiff assumed the risk of the injury, when, at the time the opening statement was made, it did not appear that the defense of assumption of risk was available to defendant. The Court rules as a matter of law that it cannot grant defendant's motion to amend. Defendant's exception noted. The Court orders a new trial. Defendant's exception noted to these rulings."

The defendant's bill of exceptions was allowed by Lorimer, C. J. As already indicated, the plaintiff's bill had been allowed previously.

McLane, Davis Carleton and Robert P. Bingham (Mr. Bingham orally), for the plaintiff.

Wyman, Starr, Booth, Wadleigh Langdell (Mr. Louis E. Wyman orally), for the defendant.


In ordering a new trial on procedural grounds, the Presiding Justice acted on the assumption that proof of the defendant's acceptance of the provisions of the Employers' Liability and Workmen's Compensation Act (R. L., c. 216) was necessary before a proper ruling could be made upon the sufficiency of the opening statement. Whether, in view of the unquestioned authenticity of the Commissioner's certificate of acceptance, the Presiding Justice ought not to have found it "convenient, expedient and economical" (Gaudette v. McLaughlin, 88 N.H. 368, 370) to receive the certificate in evidence is a question which need not be discussed, for, in our opinion, proof of the defendant's acceptance of the provisions of the Act was unnecessary.

The only right which an employee has to claim immunity from the defense of assumption of risk is derived from chapter 216, and to correctly assert that right a plaintiff must either state in his declaration that his action is brought under the provisions of that chapter or allege facts which so indicate. See 77 N.H. 208, 551, 559; 78 N.H. 26, 354, 610; 79 N.H. 42, 61, 63, 166, 299, 311, 398, 439, 452; 92 N.H. 319.

The case of Spilene v. Company, 79 N.H. 326, on which the plaintiff relies, cannot fairly be deemed an exception to the general rule, since the declaration in that case ends with these words, "whereby an action hath accrued to the said plaintiff under the statute in such case made and provided." 334 Briefs Cases, 579. It is true that a dictum contained in the second paragraph of the opinion in Saunders v. Railroad, 82 N.H. 476, would appear to support the plaintiff's contention, but at the trial of that case there was no claim that the Act was applicable and no evidence was introduced on that issue. 390 Briefs Cases, 439-504.

It is generally held that where a remedy is given by statute, the statute "must be specially declared upon, or, at all events, the facts must be so alleged that the court, on the face of the declaration, can see that the action is founded on the statute." Crippen v. Laighton, 69 N.H. 540, 550, and cases cited.

In the case of Watts v. Company, 79 N.H. 299, 300, it is said that the object in referring to the Employers' Liability and Workmen's Compensation Act in the declaration is to give notice of a claim that the case is within those provisions of the Act which materially modify the common-law rules of liability in the plaintiff's favor.

The declaration in the present case contains no reference to chapter 216 either directly or by a recital of facts necessary to entitle the plaintiff to its benefits. Moreover, plaintiff's counsel, in answer to an inquiry by the Presiding Justice at the conclusion of the opening statement, did not suggest that the doctrine of assumed risk was not available to the defendant as a defense, but contended that the recited facts brought the case within the rule of Tremblay v. Company, 91 N.H. 24. We hold that the defendant was not required to disprove the existence of a statutory right which the plaintiff did not expressly or impliedly claim.

The nonsuit was ordered "on the ground that the offer of proof outlined in the opening statement clearly demonstrated that plaintiff assumed the risk of the injury." The opening statement is to be treated as though the evidence offered had been introduced. Charpentier v. Company, 91 N.H. 38, 40.

If the plaintiff was possessed of ordinary intelligence, and there is no claim that she was not, she must have known that if she did not step squarely on the stool, it might slip out from under her. As defendant's counsel assert in their brief, "the fall here was not connected with any rearrangement of the cloth on the rack: that work had been completed; the act was simple, the appliances visible, and the danger arose solely from the conduct of the operator herself." We agree with the further suggestion that the defendant could properly take for granted the fact "that any adult employee knows how to use a two-foot stool to get up on or down from a three-foot counter in reasonable safety."

An employer's duty to warn extends only to dangers of which his employee is justifiably ignorant, and the employee "assumes the perils incident to his service of which he is informed, or which ordinary care would disclose to him." Henderson v. Williams, 66 N.H. 405, 413; O'Hare v. Company, 71 N.H. 104, 106. If there was anything in the construction of the counter or the position of the stool which made it necessary for the plaintiff to place her foot on the stool "at an angle," that fact and the danger of descending in that manner must have been perfectly apparent to her if she paid any attention whatever to the situation, as she was bound to do. See Sanborn v. Railroad, 76 N.H. 523, 525; Jennings v. Railroad, 82 N.H. 323, 325, and cases cited.

It is our conclusion that the facts recited in the opening statement were insufficient to warrant a finding that the plaintiff, on whom the burden of proof rested (Quimby v. Shattuck, 88 N.H. 262, 263), did not know and appreciate the danger she incurred in using the stool. See Meersman v. Davison, 88 N.H. 93; Gelinas v. Company, 90 N.H. 312.

There remains for consideration the plaintiff's contention that the nonsuit was erroneously ordered because, on the stated facts, the defendant could be found guilty of a breach of the duty imposed by section 7 of chapter 215 of the Revised Laws, relating to the health and safety of employees. It is a sufficient answer to this argument to call attention to the fact that chapter 215 is a regulatory and penal statute and that the violation of such an enactment is an actionable wrong only when the Legislature expressly so provides or when the purpose and language of the statute compel such inference. Howson v. Company, 87 N.H. 200, 204, 205. Certainly there is nothing in the text of chapter 215 which remotely indicates an intent to make an employer absolutely liable to his employees for injuries caused by his failure to comply with the requirements of the chapter.

The plaintiff's exception is overruled.

Judgment for the defendant.

All concurred.


Summaries of

Fasekis v. Company

Supreme Court of New Hampshire Hillsborough
Dec 4, 1945
44 A.2d 817 (N.H. 1945)

applying prior law

Summary of this case from Mahan v. N.H. Dep't of Admin. Services
Case details for

Fasekis v. Company

Case Details

Full title:ATHENA FASEKIS v. J. J. NEWBURY COMPANY

Court:Supreme Court of New Hampshire Hillsborough

Date published: Dec 4, 1945

Citations

44 A.2d 817 (N.H. 1945)
44 A.2d 817

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