Johnell Hillman, Jr. sued Carlton Company for injuries arising out of a forklift malfunctioning and dumping Hillman 20 feet onto a concrete floor. Carlton, which maintained the forklift, defended on *433 grounds that Hillman voluntarily assumed the risk of the fall by climbing onto the vehicle’s forks despite his awareness of visible warnings prohibiting such. Agreeing that Hillman assumed the risk, the court granted Carlton’s motion for summary judgment. We reverse on the ground that although Hillman assumed the risk of falling, he did not assume the risk of being dumped by the forklift.
Construed in favor of Hillman, the record showed that Carlton negligently maintained the forklift by failing to adjust certain anchor devices controlling the lift chains, thus allowing the stop bar to repeatedly slam against and weaken the stop bolts when the forks reached their maximum height. Over time Carlton replaced four stop bolts, including two six months prior to the accident. On the morning of the accident, Carlton inspected the machine and certified it as “ready to go.”
During his employment Hillman had, without injury, often climbed onto the forklift’s forks for various purposes, despite being aware of written warnings on the machine expressly prohibiting such. On the morning of the accident, Hillman stood in a box stacked inside another box that was on the forks, so that the forklift operator could raise him to measure the height of the warehouse ceiling. As the forks neared their peak height, the stop bolts failed, and the forks exceeded their peak height. The top two sets of carriage rollers came out of the mast channel, and the forks tilted downward, dumping Hillman and the boxes onto the floor. Hillman had never before seen a forklift malfunction in this manner.
1. The issue is whether Carlton showed, as a matter of law, that Hillman assumed the risk of the forklift dumping him onto the floor.
In Georgia, a defendant asserting an assumption of the risk defense must establish that the plaintiff (1) had actual knowledge of the danger; (2) understood and appreciated the risks associated with such danger; and (3) voluntarily exposed himself to those risks.
(Footnote omitted.)
Vaughn v. Pleasent,
Construed in favor of Hillman, the evidence does not conclusively establish the first element, let alone the latter elements. Hill-man had actual knowledge of the inherent risk he could fall if he stood on or was raised by the forks, but his knowledge did not extend to the possibility that because of poor maintenance, the forks would malfunction, tilt forward, and dump him onto the ground. Vaughn emphasized that the first element can be shown only if the plaintiff had actual, subjective knowledge of the specific defect and fully *434 appreciated its danger.
Knowledge of the risk is the watchword of assumption of risk, and means both actual and subjective knowledge on the plaintiff’s part. The knowledge that a plaintiff who assumes a risk must subjectively possess is that of the specific, particular risk of harm associated with the activity or condition that proximately causes injury. The knowledge requirement does not refer to a plaintiff’s comprehension of general, nonspecific risks that might be associated with such conditions or activities.
(Punctuation and footnotes omitted; emphasis in original.)
Vaughn,
supra,
Even the federal circuit case cited by Carlton,
Mitchell v. Young Refining Corp.,
517 F2d 1036, 1040 (5th Cir. 1975), explained that plaintiff must be “fully and completely aware of the dangerous or defective conditions he is encountering, and the danger to himself entailed therein. . . .”
Mitchell
relied in part on
Kreiss v. Allatoona Landing,
A more recent case reversed summary judgment on this very ground.
Sutton v. Sumner,
Similarly,
Vaughn,
supra,
Other cases analyzing the assumption of risk doctrine support this conclusion. See
Gen. Mfg. Housing v. Murray,
Significant is the distinction, outlined in
Little Rapids Corp. v. McCamy,
Finally, whether a party assumed the risk of his injury is generally a jury issue that should not be decided by summary judgment unless the defense is conclusively established by plain, palpable, and undisputed evidence.
Cornwell,
supra,
2. The ruling in Division 1 moots the other enumerations of error.
Judgment reversed.
