40 Ind. App. 257 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1907
Appellee sued the appellant to recover damages for an injury alleged to have been sustained by him in a trench while he was working for appellant in making connections of the water-mains of appellant’s water-works system. The action was commenced and first tried in the Bartholomew Circuit Court, and a verdict rendered for the appellee. Appellant’s motion for a new trial was sustained. The venue of the ease was changed to the Jackson Circuit Court, in which court a trial before a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for the appellee in the sum of $5,000.
The complaint is in one paragraph. Omitting introductory matter, it alleges, in substance, that on and before April 8, 1904, defendant owned and operated a system of water-works in the city of Columbus, used to supply the inhabitants of said city with water; that, in order to extend said system, defendant on said April 8, 1904, was engaged in extending the water-main, together with the neeessáry service-pipes thereto, along Fifth street from Franklin street to Mechanic street, and in excavating a trench in said Fifth street, together with branch trenches running at right angles with said main'trench, wherein to lay pipes in which to conduct water for delivery to additional consumers, and had a large 'force of men employed in the
The errors assigned are: (1) That the Bartholomew Circuit Court erred in overruling appellant’s demurrer to the complaint; (2) the Jackson Circuit Court erred in overruling appellant's motion for a new trial.
It is ably and earnestly argued that the demurrer to the complaint should have been sustained because the facts disclosed show that appellee assumed the risk.
(1) In enumerating reasons supporting the claim, appellant asserts that in order to recover for defects in work
(2) When a servant enters upon an employment which is from its nature necessarily hazardous, he assumes all the usual risks and perils incident to the service.
(3) A servant is deemed to accept the risk, where he has the same knowledge or means of knowledge of the danger that the master has.
(4) The servant will be presumed to have knowledge of the defect or danger, where the defect or danger is so obvious and apparent as to be perceived by any one without making a special inspection.
(5) Obvious defects or dangers, open to the ordinary, careful observation, or such as are or should be known by the exercise of ordinary care, are assumed by the employe.
(6) Where the danger is obvious, the master is not liable, though the servant is acting under the directions of the master.
(7) General allegations of the absence of knowledge will be overcome by allegations from which it is evident that the servant must have known of the defects, or had the same means and opportunity for such knowledge as the master possessed.
General allegations will be overcome by particular averments. Such controlling particular averments do not appear in the complaint before us. Appellee was not engaged in digging in the part of the trench at which he received his injury. He had worked in the main trench where the formation made the sides safe without support. When injured he was engaged, not in digging the trench, but in assisting in making a connection of the water-pipes, under the order of appellant’s superintendent.
A distinction is made between cases in which the negligence of the workman cooperates in making his own working place dangerous and those in which the place is made dangerous by others. In the case at bar appellee had not had anything to do with the preparation of the trench or making of the “bell hole” at the place of his injury.
Prank EL Seward, a witness introduced by the defendant, testified that he was in the business of plumbing and steam heating; that he lived in the city of Columbus, was a member of the city council, chairman of the water-works committee, and as chairman of the water-works committee it was his duty to supervise the construction of the water-mains and laterals over certain of the streets in said city; that while performing his duties he took occasion to examine the ditches that were dug on Fifth street, and he saw the ditch in which the appellee was injured. Ele was asked the following question: “Now, Mr. Seward, you say you saw the way vthe water-mains and laterals were being put in on Fifth street at the time Mr. Allen was hurt. You may state if the work was done in the usual and ordinary way that it had been done by the city before that time?” The question being objected to, the record shows that “the defendant offered to prove that the witness Frank Seward, who is a competent witness, if permitted to testify, will testify that on April 8, 1904, he was chairman of the waterworks committee of the city of Columbus, and as such had general supervision of the construction of the water-mains in that city; that a great deal of work of that character had been done in that city, and he was acquainted with the way in which the work was done at the point where the plaintiff is alleged to have been injured; that the work was done in the usual manner and- customary way the same ldnd of work had heretofore been done.” The court sustained the objection to this question, and this ruling is made one of the reasons in the motion for a new trial. There was no reversible error in these rulings. If it was negligence to fail to brace the sides of this trench — and the jury have so found — then if the work was done in the usual and ordinary way that it had been done by the city before that time, that fact would not have relieved the city from lia
Judgment affirmed.