186 Ky. 635 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1920
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
This action is one to recover damages for personal injury. It was here on appeal once before and the judgment reversed. See 181 Kentucky, 612. That verdict and judgment was for $1,000.00, and the one now involved is for the same amount. Appellant insists that the facts shown by Cisco preclude his recovery — that there was no negligence shown on the part of the company.
Cisco was employed by the lumber company to roll logs which had been dumped on the bank of a pond into the pond, and otherwise aid in getting' the logs on to the skidway of the sawmill. He had just been employed that day but was experienced in handling logs. Three logs dumped on the bank of the pond had lodged against a stump which stood near the water’s edge. Cisco undertook to prize them loose and’to roll them into the pond so that the dirt and grit which stuck to them would we washed off before the logs came in contact with the saw of the mill. He was working- on a night shift and the lights were not bright. He could not see the stump but he could see the three logs, and with a cant hook and spike undertook to release the logs but in doing so he exerted a greater force than proved necessary to release one of the logs and bring it on top of the stump. In attempting to raise the log to the top of the stump he threw it entirely over the stump and the other logs rolled down against his leg, causing the injury of which he now complains.
"On the question of insufficient lights, plaintiff merely claims that he could not see the stump. He does not claixn that he could not see the logs, or that the result of his ‘little flip’ would have been different had there beexx more light. It is likewise clear that he was not injured because the task was too great for one maxx. On the contrary, the accident was due entirely to the fact that plaintiff miscalculated the effect of his. own effort and failed to get out of the way of the logs. Under these circumstances the danger of being struck by the logs which he was attempting to move was one of the ordinary risks, of the business and was necessarily assumed, by the plaintiff.”
It is quite manifest from the evidence now before us
If upon another trial the evidence is in substance the same as upon the last two trials, the court will direct the jury to find and return a verdict for the defendant company.
Judgment reversed.