— Tom Whorton, while loading some steel railroad rails on a flat car of the Alabama Great Southern Railroad Company, had his hand mashed; and he brought this suit to' recover the damages which he suffered on .that account. There was some evidence tending to show that ordinarily it takes ten men to load such rails on a flat car. The evidence showed that at the time of the injury there were not ten men engaged in that work; some of the evidence being that seven men were engaged in the work, while some of the other evidence tended to show that only five men were engaged in the work. The place where the injury occurred was upon the open.right of way of the railroad company. The rails were lying by the side of the roadbed at a point where there is a curve in the tralck. This curve threw one side of the flat car up higher than the other side, and the evidence shows that
We copy the following from the testimony of the plaintiff, which shows that he understood the situation as we have above expressed it: “The rail was not high enough to clear the car, and we had to pitch it, and it slipped on my hand and injured it." It took half my weight to throw the rail, and when we threw it, that threw me to the edge of the car. We could not drop the rail at the time it caught me, and the rail was slipping. We told Mr. Lambert that we could not load the rails from here unless we had other men, but he said, Well, load them/ that is what he said. I have been railroading for 25 years, working on the tracks. Ten men are usually required to load rails of that kind. Ten men are usually employed to load rails from the ground.”
The quoted evidence we think clearly shows that- the plaintiff himself based his right of recovery, not upon
In our opinion the defendant was entitled to affirmative instructions as to the count which we have above considered. The judgment of the trial court is therefore reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.