23 Ind. App. 319 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1899
Appellant is a corporation and owns and operates a .stone quarry. Appellee was an employe, and while so engaged was injured by appellant’s alleged negligence. This action was to recover damages for such injury.
The complaint is in five paragraphs, and each paragraph is voluminous. In the first paragraph it is averred that appellee was employed specially as a “wheeler”, whose duty it was to wheel stone, dirt, and rubbish in stripping the same off of the ledges of stone; that in the discharge of the duties of his employment, he was free from danger; that he received $1.25 per day; that in taking out stone appellant used what, is known as a channeler, which was a heavy
The second paragraph has al'1 the averments of the first, and contains the additional averments that the appellant negligently failed to furnish a sufficient number of servants properly and safely to run the channeling machine.
The third paragraph is substantially like the second, except that it charges that appellant’s servants in charge of the machine were incompetent, and known to be such by appellant; that such facts were unknown to appellee, and that he was ordered to go upon the machine to adjust the
The fourth paragraph differs from the third in that it is there averred that the channeling machine was defective, both as to its cogs and pulleys; that appellant knew said fact and that appellee was ignorant thereof.
The fifth paragraph states in substance the same facts as to the alleged negligence of appellant, appellee’s freedom from negligence, and that the channeling machine was in charge of one Mitchell, whose orders appellee was bound to obey. It was the intention of the pleader to state facts which would bring this paragraph within the provisions of the act approved March 4, 1893, commonly known as the employers’ liability act.
The trial court overruled a demurrer to each of these paragraphs, and appellant excepted. The cause was put at issue by answer in denial. Trial by jury resulted in a general verdict for appellee for $2,000. With the general verdict the jury returned special findings of fact by way of answers to interrogatories submitted to them. The appellant moved for judgment in its favor on the facts specially found; also moved in arrest of judgment and for a new trial. Each of these motions was overruled,, and appellant lias assigned all of said adverse rulings as error.
The learned counsel for appellant has spent much time in discussing the sufficiency of each paragraph of complaint, but has failed to cite any authorities in support of his argument. To take up and discuss seriatim the many questions argued by appellant would take much time and labor, without corresponding fruitful results. After a careful consideration of the complaint, and an examination of the authorities applicable to cases of this character, we are led to the conclusion'that each paragraph of the complaint stated a cause of action. The complaint in general terms proceeds
The next question discussed by counsel is the overruling of the motion for judgment on the answers to interrogatories. A. correct'determination of this question necessitates a statement of the facts specially found. The interrogatories and answers thereto are brief, and we give them in full: “(1) Did plaintiff place his arm beneath the chain to which the drills were then suspended, to wit, his injured arm? Yes. (2) Did plaintiff know that the drills were suspended from the chains when he placed his arm beneath the chain? Yes. (3) Did plaintiff after placing his arm beneath the chain hold it there for the space of about one minute before the drills dropped and pulled down the chain upon his arm? Yes. (4) Could not plaintiff have seen had he looked that the drills were suspended from the chain when he placed his arm beneath the chain? Yes. (5) What was there, had plaintiff looked, to have prevented him seeing that the drills were suspended to the end of the same chain that fell upon his arm? Nothing. (6) Did any one give plaintiff any specific command at the time he went upon the channeler to go upon the channeler? No. (7) Did plaintiff not climb upon the channeler to the point where he was
To .restate the rule so firmly established and. so long adhered to in this jurisdiction of the controlling influence of the special findings, where there is irreconcilable conflict between the general verdict and the special findings, would be a useless task. The complaint as a whole proceeds upon
Turning to the interrogatories and answers, a cursory review will readily demonstrate that the facts thereby established preclude appellee’s recovery, notwithstanding the general verdict. By these, we find that appellee placed his aim beneath the chain, to which the heavy drills were suspended; that he knew the ’drills were so suspended; that he held it there for a minute before the drills dropped; that he went upon the channeler without any specific command or direction of any one; that he was employed to do general work; that when he went on the channeler, he selected his own position and his own mode of work; that he did not place anything under the chain to keep it from falling; that he did not perform the work he was doing in the manner that was ordinarily safest; that the accident occurred in daylight, and that he had another and absolutely safe way of doing the work so far as any danger or injury to his hand or arm was concerned. It is plain that the entire machinery with which he was working, and the whole situation, was open and obvious to appellee. He was bound to know that if he placed his hand under the chain to which were attached drills weighing five or six hundred pounds, and the chain with such weights attached should fall upon it, he would be injured. It was an open obvious risk. He took no precautions to keep the chain from falling; he kept his hand under the chain for about one minute; he did not do the work in the ordinarily safest manner, and there was
Concede for the sake of argument that appellee was inexperienced in the work he was doing, yet appellant had a right to presume that he would exercise some degree of care to avoid injury, and that he would not place himself in a dangerous position unless such position was one which he was ordered to occupy. Spencer v. Ohio, etc., R. Co., 130 Ind. 181; Atlas Engine Works v. Randall, 100 Ind. 293. The law of negligence is so firmly established that there is no longer any speculation or uncertainty about it. An employer is not liable for an injury to his employe that could not reasonably have been anticipated. Standard Oil Co. v. Helmick, 148 Ind. 457. Here' appellant could not have anticipated the happening of the particular accident that resulted in appellee’s injury. We take it to be the law that if there are two ways of performing an act, one of which is attended with peril or danger, and the other is absolutely safe from danger, and the person performing the acts, upon his own volition, chooses the dangerous way, and is injured, he can not call upon his employer to respond, in damages. Such conduct would constitute contributory negligence. See Erskine v. China, etc., Co., 71 Fed. 270; Wabash Paper Co. v. Webb, 146 Ind. 303. Another well established rule is, that where danger is alike open to the observation of all, both the master and the servant are on an equality, and the master is not liable for any injury to the servant resulting from the dangers of the business in which he is engaged. Beach on Cont. Neg. §140; Bailey’s Personal Injuries, §§777, 778; Rush v. Missouri, etc., Co., 36 Kan. 129; Burlington, etc., R. Co. v. Liehe, 17 Col. 280, 286, 29 Pac. Rep. 175; Vincennes, etc., Co. v. White, 124 Ind. 376; Griffin v. Ohio, etc., R. Co., 124 Ind. 326; Atlas Engine Co. v. Randall, 100 Ind. 293.
The' facts specially found bring appellee within the rule
The facts specially found irresistibly lead to three conclusions: (1) That appellee assumed the risks incident to his employment; (2) that he was negligent in the manner of performing' the service in which he was engaged, and (3) that appellant was not negligent as charged. These facts being thus established, they can not be reconciled with the general verdict upon any supposable state of the evidence, and they controvert some fact or facts which constitute an essential and indispensable part of appellee’s cause of action. In such case, the special facts found are in irreconcilable conflict with the general verdict. The general verdict necessarily affirms that appellant owed to appellee a duty that it did not perform; that it was negligent, as charged, and that appellee was without negligence. These facts are flatly and unequivocally contradicted by the special findings. As was said -in Pennsylvania Co. v. Myers, 136 Ind. 242: “In case of such conflict, the statute requires us to treat the special findings as true, and the general verdict, to the extent of such conflict, as'untrue; and requires us to hold that the former shall control the latter, and to give judgment accordingly.” §547 R. S. 1881, §547 Burns 1894. So it appears that the special findings in the case before us so far destroy the force of the general verdict as to show that appellee has wholly failed to establish his cause of action against appellant, as charged in his complaint. This conclusion makes it wholly unnecessary for us to determine other and very interesting questions which counsel have so ably discussed.
The judgment is reversed, and the court below is directed to sustain appellant’s motion for judgment on the answers to interrogatories.