64 Ind. App. 673 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1916
On February 3, 1914, appellee,
To the extent material, the substance of the complaint is as follows: On February 3, 1914, and for several months prior thereto, appellee was in appellant’s employ as an engine packer. As such it was his duty to place packing in the boxing of the engines brought to the roundhouse for that purpose, among others. In the boxing there were certain perforated, conical plates, the holes in which were frequently found to be filled with hardened grease. He had received general directions from appellant’s foreman, from whom it is alleged he took orders, to remove the grease from such plates by placing the latter on top of one of the stoves that the grease might thereby be melted and burned out. Appellee’s duties required him to come in contact with locomotives, and as a consequence his clothing while he was at work was saturated with oil and grease. While appellee was in appellant’s employ, the latter, for the purpose of providing heat and comfort for its employes, maintained in, the roundhouse a certain kind of stove, known as a “peach basket stove.” It is alleged that such stove was a dangerous equipment and that its use by appellant was hazardous to the
Appellant urges that the principle of assumed risk, applied to the answers returned by the jury to certain submitted interrogatories, defeats appellee’s right to recover, and that the court erred in overruling appellant’s motion for judgment on such answers. The court
Other questions presented are not decided. For errors indicated, the judgment is reversed, with instructions to sustain the demurrer to the complaint, with permission to amend, if desired.
Note.- — -Reported in 113 N. E. 74