Rodney Dale Benefield a/k/a Elijah Dale Kilgore sued The Pep Boys—Manny, Moe & Jack, Inc. d/b/a “Pep Boys Distribution Center” (“TPB”) to recover damages for personal injuries hе sustained when his arm was pulled through the rollers of a conveyor system operating on TPB’s premises. The trial court granted TPB’s motion for summary judgment on the grounds that Benefield assumed the risk of his injury, and Benefield appeals. We reverse because, in light of evidence that the metal safety plate had been removed from the conveyor system in the area where Benefield was working, that Benefield was unaware that the plate was missing, and that Ben-efield’s arm was injured in machinery that would otherwise have been covered by the plate, a jury must decide whether Benefield assumed the risk of his injury.
Summary judgment is proper if the evidence shows “that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party
TPB’s conveyor system included a series of metal plates or shielding attached to the machinery which had written labels warning: “DANGER DO NOT REMOVE WHILE CONVEYOR IS RUNNING.” All of the convеyor systems with which Benefield was familiar in his previous work had similar safety shielding or metal covers, and “99 percent” of the conveyor system at TPB’s distribution center was also prоtected by metal covers, including most of the conveyor system adjacent to the aisle where Benefield was working. The metal plate had been removed by TPB, howеver, from that portion of the conveyor next to Benefield.
While Benefield was working, a prong from the light fixture fell onto the conveyor.
At issuе on appeal is whether TPB was entitled to summary judgment because Benefield assumed the risk of his injury. “In Georgia, a defendant asserting an assumption of the risk defense must establish thаt the plaintiff (1) had actual knowledge of the danger; (2) understood and appreciated the risks associated with
The evidence in this case does not demand the conclusion that Benefield had actual and subjective knowledge of the danger involved in attempting to retrieve the prong from the conveyor. Benefield аdmitted that, on the evening of April 7, 2004, he knew that it was possible for a person to get caught in the mechanical parts of a moving conveyor belt and be injured. Howevеr, Benefield’s knowledge that conveyors posed a risk of danger, even the danger of being caught, does not demonstrate Benefield was aware of the risk presented by the machinery and rollers exposed by the missing metal plate and in which his arm was ultimately injured. Rather, a jury could conclude that he did not, with full knowledge thereof, expоse himself to the risk posed by the conveyor in its defective condition. “[T]he first element [of assumption of risk] can be shown only if the plaintiff had actual, subjective knowledgе of the specific defect and fully appreciated its danger.”
TPB argues that the evidence showed that Benefield knew that the metal plate was missing, and that, in any event, he assumed the risk of injury when he decided to stick his hand into or near the exposed maсhinery. However, Benefield averred that prior to his injury he did not see that the protective metal shielding on the conveyor had been removed or that he was working nеxt to exposed rollers. Benefield also testified that during the course of his work that evening he had been up and down the aisle adjacent to the conveyor system at least four times. However, Benefield would not necessarily have seen during these trips that a portion of the conveyor system, which was located to the side of the aisle, was not protected by metal covers. Although the rollers that injured Bene-field’s arm were exposed, the evidence does not demand a finding that he realized that these parts were improperly exposed when he reached for the fallen prong. Benefield’s work involved light fixtures, and so it can be reasonably inferred thаt his attention was focused upward and not to the side. According to Benefield, when the prong fell onto the conveyor system, he glimpsed the object out of the corner of his eye, and then he reflexively reached out to grab it. A jury could conclude that Benefield did not have actual knowledge of the hazard presented by the еxposed machinery when he decided to retrieve the prong.
“Except in plain, palpable and undisputed cases where reasonable minds cannot differ as to the conclusions to be reached, questions of assumption of risk are for the jury.”
Judgment reversed.
Notes
OCGA § 9-11-56 (c).
(Footnote omitted.) Gainey v. Smacky’s Investments,
Benefield deposed that the prong fell onto the belt itself but in a later affidavit averred that the prоng fell into the side of the conveyor belt where the mechanical parts of the conveyor system were exposed. TPB contends that this contradictory testimony wаs unexplained and should be construed most strongly against Benefield for purposes of summary judgment. See Prophecy Corp. v. Charles Rossignol, Inc.,
(Citations omitted.) Hillman v. Carlton Co.,
(Footnote omitted.) Kroger Co. v. Williams,
(Emphasis supplied.) Hillman, supra at 433-434 (although plaintiff was aware of prohibition against riding on forklifts, and so exposed himself to the risks inherent in the action, such as falling, he did not assume the risk of being dumped off the forklift as a result of a malfunction attributable to the defendant’s negligence). See also Vaughn v. Pleasent,
(Emphasis supplied.) Hillman, supra at 435 (1).
(Citation and punctuation omitted.) Trustees of Trinity College, supra.
