34 Ind. App. 541 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1904
Action to recover damages for personal injury. The amended complaint was in one paragraph. Its averments, summarized, are to the effect that the defendant corporation is a manufacturer of milling machinery in Indianapolis ; that on August 24, 1900, appellant was working for it in its factory, cleaning or smoothing the rough places off of mining machinery; that this was his chief duty, and that, to perform it, he was required by appellee to place said machinery or castings upon a truck which ran into said factory, and such truck was then run out of the building into appellee’s yard, where it was the custom and appellant’s duty to clean and smooth the castings while thereon; that on said day appellant was working at his usual and customary duties in cleaning and smoothing castings upon said truck in said yard, without negligence on his part; that appellee had negligently piled, or caused to be piled, near said track and appellant’s working place, pig-iron in ricks parallel with said track and near thereto; that said iron had been piled too near said track, too high, and in an unsubstantial and negligent manner, making said ricks dangerous and likely to fall, thereby rendering appellant’s working place dangerous; that appellant was engaged at his work as aforesaid, with his back to said ricks, and in said place as aforesaid, without fault on his part, and without knowledge
The error assigned is in overruling the motion for a new trial. In support of the assignment, appellant has argued questions relating to the admission of evidence, the' giving of certain instructions, and the refusal to give others requested.
The ninth instroction given to the jury was as follows: “When a servant engages in the employment of a master, he thereby assumes all such risks of injury as are incidental and necessarily attend and attach to the kind of work for which he was employed. He also assumes all dangers and risks as are open, obvious and apparent, or which, by the exercise of reasonable and ordinary care, he could have ascertained and known of. The meaning of this doctrine of assumption of risk amounts to this: That when a servant engages in an employment which is necessarily attended with some' risk or danger, or if, while he is engaged in such
10. Appellant requested that the jury be instructed as follows: “The rule that a servant assumes such risks of his employment as are apparent or incidental to it is to be considered in connection with the more general principle which requires that the master shall provide for the safety of his servants. It is a question for you to determine, under the facts of this case, whether the risks or danger, if any, to the plaintiff’s working place, was visible, palpable, incident to the particular service, or should have been discovered by the plaintiff in the exercise of ordinary care. An agreement on the part of the servant to asume the risks of danger to his working place can not be conclusively presumed from mere knowledge of its existence. It is only where the person injured, knowing and appreciating the danger, voluntarily encounters it, that such knowledge is a defense. The knowledge, however, is a material fact, if it exists, for your consideration in determining whether, under all the circumstances, the plaintiff assumed the risk or was guilty of contributory negligence.” The instruction refused is based upon and follows the language of the opinion in City of Ft. Wayne v. Christie (1901), (156 Ind. 172, 176. It is conceded that “It is not enough that a servant should know of a defect alone, for his experience or ignorance may be suc?h
The principle is stated in a recent text-book as follows: “The plaintiff is presumed to possess ordinary intelligence, and to exercise care to discover what such intelligence would enable him to know and appreciate. And as he is required to apply this grade of intelligence to the investigation of the risks of the employment which he undertakes; so he is
The requirement that the employe does or should appreciate the danger to which he is subjected is essential to a contract for assumption of the risk arising from the existence of an obvious defect. Where the risk assumed is incident to the occupation, the acceptance of the employment creates the contract.
In Ferren v. Old Colony R. Co. (1881), 143 Mass. 191, 9 N. E. 608, the plaintiff was of mature age, and had been in the railroad company’s service about seven years, as a blacksmith.' His contract did not contemplate work outside of the shop. In compliance with the direction of his foreman, he went with others into the yard to move a car. He was caught between the side of the car and the wall, and was crushed. He had not before been between the ear track and the corner of the building at the place where he was injured, although he had never refused to help move cars. The supreme court -of Massachusetts, in affirming the judgment in his favor, said: “Of course, he could see that this space was narrow; but it would seem that neither he nor the others who were pushing on the same side of the
In Roth v. Northern Pac. Lumbering Co. (1889), 18 Ore. 205, 22 Pac, 842, the employe was a laborer, injured, while passing from one place to another in a factory, by a rapidly revolving shaft with projecting set-screws. The court said: “But it is to be borne in mind that there is a difference between a knowledge of the facts and a knowledge ,of the risks which they involve. One may know the facts, and yet not understand the risks. * * * ‘It is not so much a question whether the party injured has knowledge of .all the facts in his situation, but whether he is aware of the dapger that threatens him.’ * * * So that in a case like the present, where the evidence is conflicting as to ■¡¡yjagtbpr 'or pot defendant had knowledge of the risks tc>
That it is essential, to create an implied contract to assume a risk arising from the open and obvious character of. the danger, that the employe both knows and appreciates the danger, has recently been so often declared by the Supreme Court that we do not feel at liberty to hold otherwise, nor to hold that knowledge embraces and includes the appreciation required. City of Ft. Wayne v. Christie (1901), 156 Ind. 172; Consolidated Stone Co. v. Summit (1899), 152 Ind. 297-303; Wright v. Chicago, etc., R. Co. (1903), 160 Ind. 583-590; Chicago, etc., R. Co. v. Lee (1902), 29 Ind. App. 480; Chicago, etc., R. Co. v. Richards (1901), 28 Ind. App. 46.
There are, however, other facts than those relating to the incapacity of the party injured justifying the inference that the danger arising from a known defect, or an opportunity to know a given defect, was not appreciated by the employe. In City of Ft. Wayne v. Christie, supra, the employe was of mature age, and injured while digging a trench. In Consolidated Stone Co. v. Summit, supra, the appellee was a derrick hand. In Wright v. Chicago, etc., R. Co., supra, Chicago, etc., R. Co. v. Lee, supra, and Chicago, etc., R. Co. v. Richards, supra, the persons injured were brakemen, presumably of full age and capacity.
Where the obvious defect is such that there is no room for diverse inference with regard to the knowledge and appreciation of the danger thereof by the injured employe, assumption of the risk becomes a question for the court, exactly as any other question of fact with regard to which the evidence is uncontroverted. Where there is room for diverse inference, the question is one for the jury. It becomes necessary in the case at bar to determine whether there was any evidence authorizing the submission to the jury of the question presented by the instruction, refused. If so, the plaintiff was entitled to a full statement of the law applicable to the hypothesis of fact maintained by him.
The evidence of the plaintiff herein was in part as follows: “I was employed at the works of the defendant. * *. * While with defendant I cleaned castings. The cleaning was done in the yard on a tramway between the chipping room and the turntable in good-weather. In bad weather I worked inside the chipping room, I had been
It does not appear from the testimony of any witness that the plaintiff had actual knowledge of the danger to which he was subjected by the defectively piled iron, or that he had knowledge of the defects therein. The utmost that can be said is that he might, by an examination, have discovered them. The circumstances are such as to admit of different inferences.
The complaint counts upon negligence in the following particulars: (1) Piling pig-iron along and too near the track upon which plaintiff was working; (2) piling said iron too high; (3) piling said iron in unsubstantial ricks; (4) piling said iron in a negligent manner, making said ricks dangerous and likely to fall upon him.
For error in refusing the instruction requested the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded, with instructions to sustain motion for new trial and for further proceedings.