44 Ind. App. 550 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1909
This action was brought by the appellee to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by him while in the service of appellant, and which are alleged to have been caused by its negligence.
The complaint was in two paragraphs. Appellant’s demurrer to each was overruled, the cause was put at issue, a
The substantial averments of the complaint are that the defendant is a corporation engaged in the manufacture of terra cotta; that appellee was in its employ as a laborer, and while acting within the scope of his employment, and engaged in carrying sacks of plaster of Paris from one place in appellant’s factory, where they had been stored, to another place in the factory, and emptying them into a bin, he was injured by the fall of a rick of said sacks of plaster, which stood in close proximity to the place where appellee was engaged at work; that appellant, its servants and employes, had so negligently stacked said sacks of plaster that they were liable to fall; that appellee did not know of the dangerous condition of the rick of sacks, and that appellant did know of it, and with knowledge of the danger, and of appellee’s ignorancé of the danger, ordered appellee to do the work in the dangerous place, without warning him of such danger.
Appellant also makes the point that the height of the stack was a matter that appellee was bound to know, as it was open to observation, and that the fact that the sacks were piled one immediately on top of another, in place of being ricked up with broken joints, as appellee asserts they should have been, was also equally open to observation.
While it must be conceded that appellee was bound to take notice of the height of the rick of sacks, we do not think it follows that we can say, over his averment, that he did not know of the manner in which the sacks were ricked up, that the fact that they were ricked one immediately on top of another, rather than in broken joints, was open and apparent. Conditions may have been such that this fact was so obscured as not readily to be discernible. It has been held with reference to this question, that a “servant is expected to observe such objects only, in the absence of notice, as would in an instant convince him of their danger.” Johnston v. Oregon, etc., R. Co. (1892), 23 Ore. 94; Indianapolis Traction, etc., Co. v. Holtsclaw (1908), 41 Ind. App. 520, and cases cited.
Appellee was not bound to make a critical examination .of the manner in which the sacks were ricked up, to ascertain if there was a liability of their falling. We think the complaint is not amenable to the objections urged against it. New Castle Bridge Co. v. Doty (1907), 168 Ind. 259; Avery v. Nordyke & Marmon Co. (1905), 34 Ind. App. 541.
It is earnestly insisted by appellant that the injury complained of resulted from the negligence of a fellow servant; that the work of handling the plaster of Paris was the work of a servant and not the master, and that it appears without
It must be conceded that the duty of ricking the sacks of plaster was not one which the appellant owed the servants in its employ, nor did its obligation to them require that it stand over the servant and direct him in the detail of unloading the plaster from the ear and ricking it up in the plaster room. St. Louis, etc., R. Co. v. Needham (1894), 63 Fed. 107, 11 C. C. A. 56, 25 L. R. A. 833; Chicago, etc., R. Co. v. Barker (1908), 169 Ind. 670, 17 L. R. A. (N. S.) 542; Dill v. Marmon (1905), 164 Ind. 507, 69 L. R. A. 163, and cases cited.
The gravamen of appellee’s action, however, is not negligence in ricking the sacks of plaster. The ricking up of the sacks of plaster was an act which appellee claimed created the danger. But the negligence charged against the appellant as having been the proximate cause of his injury, was in directing appellee into a place of danger to perform his work, without warning him of. the danger.
It is the theory of appellee’s case that foreman Powell stood toward the appellee in the relation of vice-principal,
We think the evidence fails to make a case entitling the appellee to recover.
Judgment reversed, with instructions to the court below to grant a new trial.