94 Ga. 658 | Ga. | 1894
The suit was under the law of Alabama, providing for the recovery by á workman injured while in the service of a corporation, by reason of the negligence of any servant of the employer, to whose order or direction the workman at the time was bound to conform, and when his injury resulted from having so conformed. The injuries resulted from a fall by plaintiff as he was trucking freight from a car across two skids to a platform. It was raining, and the skids and car-floor were wet. Plaintiff had been employed on the train under the direction of Smith, the conductor, about six months. The skids were of suitable length, nearly level, properly placed and in good condition; nothing wrong about them. The car-floor was slippery. Plaintiff testified, that he had started backward with a loaded truck from the car to the platform. The trucks had mounted the skids. That was the usual way of unloading. He had got out on the skids, about half way from car to platform, thought he felt one of the skids slip, and stopped. He could not see the end of the skids. Smith was in the car checking freight. He looked up and said, “All right; go ahead.” He was in a position to see the ends of the skids. Plaintiff started again; the skids slipped off the edge of the car; he fell and the truck fell upon him. The evidence for defendant tended to show that the injury was caused simply by accident, and that plaintiff so swore in a written report to the company as to how the accident happened. Smith denied telling plaintiff to go ahead, it was all right. There was testi