169 Ky. 342 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1916
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
In this action for damages for personal injuries, plaintiff, J. M. Richardson, recovered of defendants, J. M. Hassett & Company, a verdict and judgment for $1,750.00. Defendants appeal.
The facts are as follows: Hassett & Company are contractors and were engaged in building a railroad line from Winchester to Irvine. At the time of the accident they were operating a steam shovel, which was being used to pull down the sides of a cut. The shovel was in charge of a shovel boss and craneman. Plaintiff and three or four others composed the “pit crew.” It was their duty to clean away the dirt and debris that was pulled down by the shovel and to lay the track for the shovel to move on. On each side of the shovel were jack arms about six feet in length. One end of each arm was attached to the shovel about four and one-half feet from the ground and the other end rested on the ground. After the shovel had pulled down the earth and rock, it would stop working and the “pit crew” would then perform their duty. When this was done the shovel would again resume its work. In other words, the “pit
The evidence for defendant shows that plaintiff was warned that the position he took in front of the jack-arm was such as to make escape practically impossible in case he saw that he was about to be struck by falling debris.
While other grounds are urged for reversal, we deem it necessary to consider only the propriety of the trial court’s action in refusing to direct a verdict in favor of •defendant.
This is not a case where the servant was injured by an unknown risk or by some unexpected act on the part of the master. Though plaintiff claims that he had 'turned his eyes to the track in front of the shovel and did not know that the rock was going to fall, yet he admits that he knew that the shovel had been used in excavating beneath the rock and in pulling on the rock for several minutes, and that he and other members of the “pit crew” had stopped their work hnd taken their respective positions because the shovel was then being-used. There was no way by which the ledge of rock could have been dislodged and gently laid in the bottom of the pit. The only way to remove the rock was to dislodge it and cause it to fall. The very work in which . defendant was engaged and in which the shovel was employed necessarily made the place unsafe, but only unsafe for those who remained sufficiently close to the falling debris to be struck by it. A grown man of average intelligence is bound to take notice of the ordinary laws of nature. He must know that if a sufficient force is applied by a steam shovel to an overhanging rock the rock will fall, and if it does fall, it will injure those who are near enough to be struck by it. Clearly the safe place doctrine has no application to the facts of this case. ■Under such circumstances the master is not charged with the duty of warning the servant of such a plain and obvious danger. The method of doing the work had nothing to do with the accident. The rock did not fall because of any negligence on the part of the master, but solely because the effort to dislodge it was successful. Not only was there no negligence on the part of defendant, but plaintiff, with full knowledge of the conditions, took a- position of obvious peril and consequently assumed the risk of injury. It follows that the trial court erred in refusing the peremptory asked for by defendant.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded for a new trial consistent with this opinion.