131 Ky. 412 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1909
Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
Ballard & Ballard Company owned and operated a flouring, mill in the city of Lonisville. The company wished to enlarge one of its buildings, and to do this it became necessary to remove the roof, and do other work about the building. They employed Henry Wolters, an architect, to make the plans and speei
One of the principal questions to be determined is whether or not Leatherman was an independent contractor. If it should be ruled from the evidence as a matter of law that he was an independent contractor, Ballard & Ballard Company are not liable in damages for the death of his employe Lee; or, if this question under the facts is in dispute, then it should have been submitted to the jury. Looking a little more carefully into the evidence for the appellee upon this point, we find that an employe of Ballard & Ballard Company named Playford was their superintendent of the work, and was frequently about
The fact that the person for whom work is being
As under the facts of this case it cannot be determined as a matter of law whether Leatherman was or not an independent contractor, we conclude that the question should haAm been submitted to the jury under appropriate instructions, and the jury should be told that if Leatherman was an independent contractor, Ballard & Ballard Company were not liable in damages for the death of Lee. If the jury should find from the evidence under appropriate instructions that Leatherman was not an independent contractor, but that the relation of master and servant existed between Ballard & Ballard Company and Leatherman and the other laborers, then the question arises, What was the duty of Ballard & Ballard Company under
But the master is not, in cases like this, charged with the duty of exercising ordinary care to discover the dangerous or unsafe place, and is not liable to respond in damages for an injury to the servant because of the defective or dangerous condition that he did not know of, but which might have been discovered by the exercise of ordinary care. In Thompson on Negligence, section 3979, we find the following: “The work of tearing down an old building is
It is not possible to lay down any general principle that may be strictly applied in defining the duty of the master to his servant in the performance of the duties for which he has been employed. Nor is it possible to define with precision the line. that separates the obligation to furnish reasonably safe places and instrumentalities from conditions that absolve the master from the full performance of this duty. Nearly every case presents different facts, and
Applying these principles to the facts of this case, our conclusion is that Lee assumed the ordinary risks incident to the employment, and that Ballard & Ballard Company were not liable unless they failed to warn him of defects or dangers known to them, 'and which he could not, by the exercise of ordinary care, have discovered. If there was any evidence that Lee knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have
„We are also of the opinion that if the relation of master and servant existed between Ballard & Ballard Company and Leatherman, then Leatherman, as well as Playford and ‘Wolters, were the agents of Ballard & Ballard Company, superior in authority to Lee, and Ballard & Ballard Company are bound by their acts and conduct in the course of the employment, and their knowledge of existing conditions, to the same extent as they would be if they in person had superintended the work or directed or controlled the laborers.
On another trial the court, in addition to the usual instructions defining the measure of damages and ordinary care, should instruct the jury as herein indicated; and the judgment is reversed, with directions to grant a new trial.