127 Minn. 432 | Minn. | 1914
Action to recover damages claimed to have been caused by defendant’s failure to furnish plaintiff, its servant, a safe place in which to work. Defendant denied négligence on its part and alleged contributory negligence and assumption of risk. Plaintiff had a verdict. Defendant appealed from an order denying its alternative motion.
Plaintiff’s duties required him to pull a truck along an elevated platform, to and from defendant’s icing plant, in connection with the icing of refrigerator cars by means of chutes. The truck had two wheels 18 inches in diameter, set three feet apart, the extreme width. The platform was parallel to the railroad track and some 16 feet above it, being 20 feet wide and more than 50 feet long. A shed 12 feet wide, open in front, supported by posts, was situated along a portion of the opposite side thereof from the track, and was devoted to the storage of boxes used in the business but not in connection with the icing department. The only guard on the other side of the platform was a 4x4 inch timber nailed to the floor on the extreme outer edge. Plaintiff had been employed in the same work at the same place for some six days prior to the accident. Others were likewise employed; the rule being that a truckman without a load should stop and the one with a load pass. Plaintiff was 23 years old, a foreigner with slight knowledge of our language, having been in this country only a few months prior to the accident. The
If its negligence in this regard proximately contributed to the injury, and if there was no assumption of risk or contributory negligence, defendant is liable, notwithstanding that, as must be held, tbe two truckmen were fellow servants, and even though it be conceded that tbe box truckman was negligent; for if defendant was
Tbe general instructions were not in harmony witb tbe views above expressed.
Tbe case is not one, however, for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, but for a new trial.
Order reversed.