81 So. 642 | Miss. | 1919
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal from a judgment for one hundred and fifty dollars awarded' the appellee in the court below for an injury alleged to have been sustained hy him while employed hy the appellant and because of its negligence.
On the occasion in question the section crew, of which appellee was a member, was ordered hy their foreman to gather up a lot of cross-ties which had been placed near the appellant’s railroad track, carry them a distance of thirty or forty feet, and place them in one stack. The appellee testified that at the time óf his alleged injury he had been employed hy the appellant nearly two months, during which time, whenever he
“On the third swing, as we were placing the tie on the stack, I .just turned it loose, and must have strained myself some way, and it was just as if something had torn from my hack and I dropped to my knees.”
The contentions of the appellee are: First, that the appellant’s foreman was negligent in directing that the ties he handled by two men only; and, second, by directing that they he placed in one stack, in neither of which is there any merit, for it does not appear that two men could not easily carry a one hundred-pound tie thirty to forty feet and place it on a stack “higher than a man’s head;” consequently the peremptory instruction requested by the appellant should have been given.
Eeversed and judgment here for appellant.
Reversed.