38 Ind. App. 546 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1906
The appellee was injured while in the performance of his duty as a machinist in the employ of the appellant at its machine-shop in Lima, Ohio, engaged,
Some objections to the complaint are suggested by counsel, but we think it proper to pass to a consideration of the case upon its real merits, rather than to send the case hack for a correction of the pleading, if it can be said to be defective, and thus to prolong unnecessarily a controversy over the facts, which sufficiently appear in the record.
With the general verdict in favor of the appellee the jury returned' answers to interrogatories, whereby they found specially that the appellee was employed by the appellant from July 15, 1902, to March 24, 1903, as a machinist. At the time of his injury he had been engaged by the appellant in such capacity about seven months. At the time he was employed by the appellant he was a skilled mechanic in the line in which he was employed. He received his injury at 1:20 o’clock in the afternoon. The punch which he was using at the time he received his injury was not in the condition of punches in common use by railway companies in that line of work. As to whether the pole or head of the punch which he was using at the time he was injured was split when he first began to use it on the day on which he was injured, there was no evidence. The pole or head of this punch was rough and scaly when he began to use it on that day. The punch was in design, but not in character, such as was generally used in that line of work. The pole or head of the punch became burred from long usage prior to the time when' he first obtained it on the day of his injury. A sliver of iron from the bolt which was being removed from the smoke-arch did not fly off and into his eye and cause his injury. The head or pole of the punch
It is not claimed and does not appear that the handle punch was not properly made of suitable and sound materials and in proper shape, or that it was not such a punch in design and materials as was adapted to the proper performance of the work in which it was used. Uo failure on ■the part of the employer properly to inspect it to ascertain its insufficiency in any . of these particulars was asserted, and in such respects it must be considered, for the purposes of the case, as a sufficient tool. The only fault charged to the appellant was that it had permitted the head of the punch to become battered down and burred by its proper use, wherein it was struck and pounded upon the head by hammers in driving out bolts, against the ends of which the point of the punch was held by the machinist while his helper did the striking with the hammer. It was not a broken or wholly worn out tool. It was not proved to have been split. The only fault attributed to it and found to exist was that scales or slivers of iron were liable to fly off from it when struck by the hammer. Uo negligence concerning the character of the tool or its adaptability, except in relation to this peculiar source of danger, was asserted as part of the cause of action. It was a common tool of the simplest character, there being nothing unknown, obscure, or uncertain in its materials, structure, or operation, or in its worn condition.
The appellee was a skilled mechanic in the line in which he was employed. He had been employed in the line of his work for fifteen years. He had been working with punches in doing the class of work in which he was engaged when injured about ten years, and had worked for appellant in and about the place where he was injured in the line of his work for seven months. He examined the point, which he placed upon the end of the bolt, which he and his helper
The liability of the employer cannot be made dependent wholly upon the size or the complicated or intricate nature of the instrument furnished by it to the employe, but if the instrument be a tool in common use in the employment, and be of such simple character as that here involved, and its actual condition and adaptability be necessarily known to the employe using it, and the danger incident to its use from which an injury occurs to an experienced adult employe be necessarily understood by such employe, the employer’s responsibility should not extend to liability for such injury.
We cannot adopt the theory that there can be no recovery in favor of the employe injured by an instrument for work furnished him hy his employer, through some quality or condition thereof adapted to produce the injury, whenever
Judgment reversed, with instruction to sustain the appellant’s motion for judgment upon the special findings of the jury.