26 Ind. App. 131 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1900
The appellee’s complaint, consisting of a single paragraph, was held sufficient on demurrer. It showed that the appellant, a corporation, was engaged in the business of quarrying and shipping stone in Lawrence county; that in the management of its business, it employed a great number of hands, derricks, ropes, and machinery; that the appellee was its employe as derrick boss, receiving a sum stated per day for his services; that it was his duty while in the employment of the appellant to obey the orders, directions, and commands of one Albert Stone, who was the appellant’s 'general superintendent and had full charge of the appliances, machinery, hands, and business in detail; that it was the appellee’s duty to give signals while operating the derrick, as directed by said superintendent; that on the 22nd of May, 1897, the appellant ordered and directed that the derrick should be let down and the mast pole, some sixty feet high, gradually lowered to the ground southward by means of ropes, two guy-ropes and one slack rope; that
Whatever may have been the intention of the pleader, the complaint can not be regarded as charging the appellant with negligence in removing the appellee from a safe place in which’ he had been employed to work to perform work temporarily outside of the scope of his employment in an unsafe place. It is expressly shown that he was in the line of his employment when injured. It is shown that the place was dangerous, but it was so only by reason of the defectiveness of the guy-rope. The averments relating to the place and the order to work there and the appellant’s knowledge and the appellee’s ignorance as to its being a dangerous place can be regarded only as aiding in showing that the appellee was working in the line of his duty and that the appellant had knowledge while the appellee was ignorant of the liability of the appellee to injury through the defectiveness of the guy-rope while he was so engaged within
The suggestion of counsel that the facts particularly alleged were necessarily inconsistent with the general averment of want of knowledge on the part of the appellee, is not a just criticism. It was not impossible, under the circumstances shown by the complaint, as a matter of fact, for the appellee to be ignorant of the insufficiency of the guy-rope. It was not necessary for him to show in his pleading that he had inspected the rope, or that he had not had opportunity to inspect it, or that he could not have learned of its defectiveness by the exercise of ordinary care and diligence. Evansville, etc., R. Co. v. Duel, 134 Ind. 156; Consolidated Stone Co. v. Summit, 152 Ind. 297. The complaint was sufficient to put the appellant to its answer.
The appellant having answered by a denial, the cause was tried by jury, and a general verdict in favor of the appellee was returned with answers of the jury to interrogatories. Counsel have devoted some portion of the argument to an assignment of error in overruling the appellant’s motion for judgment on the special verdict. This assignment can not be regarded as properly presenting any question for decision, inasmuch as the record does not contain a special verdict or show that a special verdict was rendered.
Charles Quackenbush, a witness for the appellee, had
' It was not necessary, we think, for the witness to be shown to have skill or experience in the making of ropes, to authorize the acceptance of his opinion as to the sufficiency in strength of the particular rope for the use to which it was put in lowering the particular derrick, the witness basing his opinion upon the facts first stated by him, including his own experience. After the best description that could have been given by witnesses of the rope and the derrick, the conclusion of the jury would be in some measure based upon conjecture; and the honest opinion of a man so qualified would conduce to greater certainty. See Porter v. Pequonnoc Mfg. Co., 17 Conn. 249; Hardy v. Merrill, 56 N. H. 221, 241; Bennett v. Meehan, 83 Ind.
A number of other supposed errors in the admission and the exclusion of testimony are argued by counsel. The matters so presented have been carefully examined by us without finding any ground for reversal, and the questions involved are not of such importance as to require further notice here.
There is also some brief discussion of the instructions. There is some want of agreement between the record and the reference thereto in the appellant’s brief, and the appellant has failed to comply with the requirements of our rules relating to the discussion of instructions. In the introduction of the evidence a number of models of derricks were used, and the references thereto in the examination of the witnesses and in their ansAvers to the questions of the attorneys are in many instances unintelligible as they appear in the record.
We have bestowed much time upon the voluminous bill of exceptions containing the evidence in our effort to determine the question extensively argued by counsel as to whether or not the case made by the evidence was substantially different from the cause of action set forth in the complaint. The mode of lowering the mast as shoAvn by the evidence was not accurately described in the pleading. A wire rope, called in evidence the main fall, which was fastened to the mast near the top thereof, extended northward and, passing over a drum, was operated by steam power, and the slackening of this rope by this method permitted the mast to descend southward. This rope did not break. The rope, by the breaking of which the injury was caused, was a slack rope made of hemp or grass used in connection with block and tackle, as alleged in the complaint, for gradually slackening the guy, a wire rope which extended westward, instead of northward as stated in the complaint. The guy which extended eastward was fastened without means of slacking.
Judgment affirmed.