Action by appellee against appellant to recover damages resulting from personal injuries sustained by appellee while employed in appellant's shops at Garrett, Indiana. *Page 247
Appellee, a boiler washer, at the time of his injury, was assisting in washing boilers of locomotives and had been so employed for about three weeks. The locomotive upon which appellee was working at the time of his injury was being regularly used by appellant in interstate commerce and the work being done was to prepare it for a trip in which it was assigned to an interstate train. The action was, therefore, under the Federal Employers' Liability Act (§§ 8657-8665 U.S. Comp. Stat. 1918). To perform a part of the work required of appellee, it was necessary for him to go upon a running board extending along the side of the boiler about eight feet from the floor of the roundhouse. This running board was reached either through the cab of the engine or up a series of steps at the front end of the engine. There were hand-rails for the use of persons who had occasion to go upon that part of the engine. Upon the front end of the boiler and on either side were located signal lamps designated as "signal markers." Such lamps were commonly used upon locomotives, though not always located as the ones here involved. Appellee was injured by a fall received as he was in the act of mounting the steps at the front end of the engine to go upon the running board for the purpose of washing the boiler. As he was mounting the steps, he took hold of the hinged top of the signal marker, which opened when he did so, and, as a result, he fell to the floor and received the injury complained of.
There was a judgment for appellee in the trial court, from which, after motion for a new trial was overruled, this appeal. The action of the court in overruling appellant's motion for a new trial is the only error assigned in this court, the reasons for which motion being that the verdict is not sustained by sufficient evidence and that it is contrary to law.
It is appellant's contention that it was not guilty of *Page 248 negligence in failing to furnish a safe place for appellee to work, that the signal marker was properly located on the front end of the engine, that it was not negligence so to maintain it, and that appellee assumed the risk ordinarily incident to his employment as a washer which required him to get on and off engines, and that the risk of falling as he went up and down the engine steps was one of the risks which he had assumed. Appellant further contends that the condition of its working place and the equipment of the engine in question were open and apparent to appellee and that he should, therefore, be held, in law, to have assumed the risk of injury because of such conditions and equipment.
The rule that must control in this case is thus stated in GilaValley, etc., R. Co. v. Hall (1913),
Judgment affirmed.
Enloe, J., dissents. *Page 250
