191 Ind. 419 | Ind. | 1921
This was an action'by the appellee against the appellant to recover damages for personal injuries sustained while at work as a molder in appellant’s foundry. On a former trial the court directed a verdict in favor of. the defendant (this appellant) which was reversed on appeal. Waznitsky v. George B. Limbert & Co. (1918), 66 Ind. App. 382, 118 N. E. 317.
Appellant filed an answer of general denial, and also a paragraph of answer stating: “That the cause of action sued upon, in plaintiff’s second paragraph of complaint did not accrue within two years before the bringing of plaintiff’s said action.”
The amended complaint in one paragraph, filed less than two years after the alleged cause of action accrued, received a construction on the former appeal. The Appellate Court then held that “eliminating matters of surplusage,” said amended complaint charged that on March 3, 1913, appellee was in the employ of appellant and was working for it under circumstances to which the Employers’ Liability Act of 1911 (Acts 1911 p. 145, §8020a et seq. Burns 1914) applied, and that while so employed and so working he was instructed by his foreman, to whose orders he was bound to conform and did conform, and who understood the danger involved, which was unknown to the appellee, to take a hand ladle and fill with melted iron some holes in a casting which had been examined by the foreman, and that he followed such instructions, relying on the superior knowledge of the foreman and believing therefrom that the holes were in proper condition to receive the molten metal,.and in the exercise of due care poured the metal into the holes, when dampness therein caused an explosion by which he was injured wholly by reason of the negligence of appellant and its foreman in requiring him to pour such metal into the holes when they had not been properly prepared for its reception. Waznitsky v. George B. Limbert & Co., supra.
Appellant complains of the exclusion of certain impeaching evidence as to what was said in the law office of counsel for the appellant by one of appellee’s witnesses, a Hungarian laborer who talked quite brokenly, on the Sunday evening before the beginning of the trial on Tuesday. But in view of all the circumstances we do not think its exclusion was reversible error, nor do we feel justified in setting out in this opinion the facts in relation thereto.
The judgment is affirmed.