
    Thomas Darcey vs. Lord & Burnham Co.
    Middlesex.
    October 9, 1946. —
    November 4, 1946.
    Present: Field, C.J., Dolan, Ron an, Wilkins, & Spalding, JJ.
    
      Negligence, Contributory, Greenhouse.
    A conclusion that a plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence was required as matter of law as the only rational .conclusion from his testimony that he, the foreman of a florist operating a greenhouse, entered the greenhouse alone in the daytime through a door whence was plainly visible to him an uncovered and unguarded hole in one of the greenhouse walks, which he knew was in that condition when he was last there the day before; and that after walking backwards along several walks while watering plants, he came to the hole, fell backwards into it, and was injured.
    Tort. Writ in the First District Court of Southern Middlesex dated May 4, 1943.
    Upon removal to the Superior Court, the action 'was tried before Dillon, J.
    
      D. H. Fulton, for the defendant.
    
      T. L. Thistle, for the plaintiff.
   Wilkins, J.

This is an action of tort to recover for injuries sustained by falling into an allegedly negligently unguarded hole in a greenhouse belonging to the plaintiff’s employer where the defendant, a contractor, was engaged in construction work. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff. The only question relates to the denial of the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict.

We summarize the evidence most favorable to the plaintiff as well as we can from a record which in some respeqts is obscure and ambiguous. The plaintiff was foreman for the Butterworth company, florists, with greenhouses in Framingham. He had been in its employ for many years, was next in rank to Butterworth, and was the active man doing the mechanical and physical work around the greenhouses and in charge of the other help. In June, 1940, the defendant began the simultaneous construction of three connected greenhouse units for the Butterworth company. The units were known as unit number 1, unit number 2, and unit number 3. The plaintiff was injured in unit number 1 on Sunday, September 15, 1940. Unit number 1 was one hundred thirty feet long and thirty feet wide, and contained five rows of benches and five walks each two feet wide. The benches and walks were more than one hundred feet long. During the construction a continuous trench (which appears to have been in the nature of a conduit for the main hot water pipe for heating and other pipes) was laid through the three units. The trench, two feet wide and three feet deep, seems to have crossed unit number. 1 at its width. It had cement sides and removable rectangular cement covers or slabs, each measuring about three feet by two feet.. There was thus afforded, when the covers were in place, a smooth-surfaced walk or aisle running the width of unit number 1 and then through the other two units. The last work performed by the defendant in unit number 1 before the events hereinafter referred to was on August 28, and at that tiipe the trench was completed and there were benches in unit number 1. On Friday, September 13, the plaintiff and two other employees of the Butterworth company started to fill unit number 1 with plants. About 10 a.m. the plaintiff saw one Elder, an employee of the defendant, nail a board across the doorway between units number 1 and number 2 “to stop anybody from falling in there.” Elder then removed the cover nearest that doorway in unit number 1, “got down into the hole and did some work.” That work was “something in the way of changing or adding to pipes.” At noon when Elder quit work, the plaintiff observed that Elder did not replace the cover, but, “to protect the hole,” nailed another board from one bench to another across the aisle in unit number 1 on the side of the hole away from the doorway. From a photograph in evidence this would appear to have been at a distance of four covers (eight to twelve feet) from the hole. The plaintiff testified that about Í p.m. Elder took down the board last referred to and worked in the hole until 4 p.m., and that Elder then put back that board, but left the cover off. The plaintiff and the two men worked until 6 p.m. when the plaintiff, who with Butterworth was the only person to have a key, locked “the outside door.” On Saturday morning the plaintiff and the two men resumed transferring plants in unit number 1. The plaintiff testified that Elder, who arrived later, “took off that rail and went to work again.” At noon when Elder quit work for the day the plaintiff observed that he did not put up “the board,” and that “the slab was off.” On Saturday afternoon the plaintiff did not work in unit number 1, but the two men did until 6 p.m. At that hour the plaintiff locked the door and went home. On the morning of Sunday, September 15, between 10 a.m. and 10: 30 a.m. the plaintiff, who had previously opened “the outside door,” entered unit number 1, where no one was working at the time. The plaintiff began to water plants. It was his habit to water plants “while backing up.” In this way the plants can be seen better. Each walk had two water connections and two lines of hose. Each length of hose permitted watering plants half the distance on each side of each walk. When the plaintiff finished watering the plants in the first walk, which was nearest “the outside door,” he did the same in the second walk “and so on,” gradually approaching the doorway leading from unit number 1 to unit number 2. “The plaintiff watered down the third walk and, when he reached the trench, he backed around on the walk to water to his left. He was backing toward the door leading to unit number 2 watering the plants on the bench to his left.” While so doing he fell into the hole from which the cover had been removed, and was hurt. The removed cover was leaning against a bench at the side of the trench.

We do not find it necessary to analyze with niceness the nature of the duty owed to the plaintiff by the defendant, as we are of opinion that as matter of law the plaintiff cannot recover because of his own negligence which contributed to his injuries. “Where from the facts which are . . . indisputable, or shown, by evidence by which the plaintiff is bound, only one rational inference can be drawn and that an inference of contributory negligence or want of due care, then the question of due care or contributory negligence is one of law for the court and a verdict for the defendant should be directed.” Duggan v. Bay State Street Railway, 230 Mass. 370, 379. Duff v. Webster, 315 Mass. 102, 103. In the case at bar the plaintiff, in the course of his duties as foreman, opened and later entered a glass building, which at the time was exclusively in his own control and in which he was not a stranger.. It was the middle of a Sunday morning in late summer. There was no evidence of unusual darkness, while photographs in evidence indicate that the building had an interior with the high quality of light which in common experience is to be found in greenhouses. The plaintiff was there long enough to water all the plants on both sides of two walks, each at least one hundred feet long, and part of the plants in a third walk. He knew that two days earlier an employee of the defendant had removed the cover nearest to the door leading to unit number 2 and had been working in the trench. See Forgione v. Frankini Construction Co. 308 Mass. 29, 31. While the plaintiff -knew that on two occasions, namely, during the noon hour and at the close of work on Friday, there had been a barrier across the trench at a distance of eight to twelve feet from the hole, he also knew that when he had last seen the place on Saturday noon, after the defendant’s employee had last worked in the trench, there was no such barrier. Moreover, there was at all times after the commencement of work Friday down to and including the moment of his fall another barrier across the doorway on the farther side of the hole. Nevertheless the plaintiff proceeded to walk backwards into the hole, which measured at the top approximately two by three feet, and which could not have failed to be entirely obvious to a person of ordinary intelligence. It must have been plainly visible to the plaintiff when he entered unit number 1 preparatory to watering the plants at a time when he undoubtedly was walking forward in a normal manner. “He was bound to use his faculties for his own protection.” Petrone v. New York Central Rail road, 301 Mass. 352, 354. There was but one rational inference to be drawn from the facts: the plaintiff did not exercise on his own behalf the requisite degree of care. This case falls within the authority of such decisions as Pigeon v. Massachusetts Northeastern Street Railway, 230 Mass. 392, 396, Benton v. Watson, 231 Mass. 582, Doyle v. Boston Elevated Railway, 248 Mass. 89, Rooney v. Merliss, 258 Mass. 407, Joyce v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, 301 Mass. 361, Botelho v. Margarida, 312 Mass. 429, and Oliver v. New England Steamship Co. 315 Mass. 151. See Lorenzo v. Wirth, 170 Mass. 596; Humphreys v. Portsmouth Trust & Guarantee Co. 184 Mass. 422, 424; Palmer v. Boston Penny Savings Bank, 301 Mass. 540, 544. In Judson v. American Railway Express Co. 242 Mass. 269, 271, the plaintiff, who was not an employee on the premises, slipped on a foreign substance in a poor light. That case has little resemblance to the facts in the present case. In Runnells v. Cassidy, 307 Mass. 128, which was another case in which the facts were quite unlike those now before- us, there was, among other things, a finding by the auditor that the plaintiff was in the exercise of due care. Many decisions relied upon by the plaintiff which have to do with the lack of the requisite degree of care by the defendant are distinguishable.

Exceptions sustained.

Judgment for the defendant.  