170 Ky. 482 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1916
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
In June, 1913, appellant was an employe of the appellee in its stone-yard in Louisville.
While assisting’ in the unloading of a ear of rough' stone hé was injured and brought this suit against the company for damages. At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence the trial court directed a verdict for the defendant and from that action of the court the plaintiff has appealed.
In its stone-yard the appellee operated a large traveling crane which runs from one end of the yard to
The day before the injury complained of. a flat ear of granite slabs had been run into the yard to be unloaded ; they were irregular in size but their dimensions were approximately eight or ten feet long, five feet wide and one inch thick. They were loaded in the car on edge, about half in each end of the car, and at each end about one-half of the slabs leaned slightly toward one side of the car and the other half towards the other side of the car; the railroad track runs north and south and about one-half of the slabs in each end of the car rested against the east side of the car and about one-half on the west side, and the bottoms of the slabs practically met in the center of the car.
In unloading these slabs, five of them were handled by the crane at one time; the men in the oar would first by the use of crowbars or other instruments, prize out five of the slabs, place a small rope around them near the end, the rope being attached to the crane, and the crane would then lift that end of the five slabs some ten or twelve inches from the floor of the car, leaving the other ends of the slabs resting on the floor, and it was then the duty of the hooker, while the slabs were in this position, to place under them a wooden block which would hold them in that position until a larger and heavier rope could be passed under the slabs at about their center, when they would all be lifted by means of the larger rope and carried by the crane to the place in the yard where they were expected to go.
On the day before the accident appellant and Péter Voll, acting as “hookers,” had unloaded half of the car, Yoll being an experienced hooker, and on the day of' the accident appellant and his brother John, who was also an experienced hooker, were engaged in unloading
The foreman, Borgmier, was present at the time- in the car, although he was some ten or twelve feet away, and had given to appellant and his brother general directions as to the doing of the work, but there is no claim that he at the time of or before the accident gave any specific directions as- to the placing of the wooden block under the slabs or as to the manner of doing it.
Appellant himself testifies in substance as above stated, but expressly states that he does not know what caused the slabs to fall to the west or what caused them to fall at all. He suggests in his testimony, however, that it might have been because the slabs were heavier at the end resting on the floor than they were at the end which was elevated by means of the rope, or that it might have been because the car was not setting level on the track, or that it might have been because the man in charge of the crane moved the traveler overhead.
The foreman, Borgmier, also testifies that he does ■ not know what caused the slabs to fall.
Yoll, the experienced hooker, was introduced and said the work was being done in the only way in which it could be done, and that it was proper in placing the wooden block under the slabs while they were so elevated at one end to place one hand against them so as to steady them while the block was placed under with the other hand, and that it was also customary for the other hooker to steady the slabs while the wooden block was being placed under them. The brother of appellant,
It is apparent that this unloading of stone in the manner indicated is more or less a dangerous occupation, hut it is plain also that, mechanically speaking, it is a very simple one. A man of average intelligence must know that a heavy stone on edge, elevated at one end several inches from the floor and resting on the floor at the heavy end will have a tendency to tilt from the very nature of its position, and an employe must take notice of this simple law of gravitation.
It is difficult to understand from the evidence, as we have recited it, of what the negligence of the master consisted, but an analysis of the evidence on the contrary is convincing that the accident happened from one of three causes: First, either because the plaintiff himself did not with one hand brace or steady the slabs, while he placed the wooden block under them with the other, or, second, because his brother, his fellow workman, did not brace or steady the slabs while he was placing the wooden block under them, or, third, because there was some movement of the crane by the operator thereof just at the time' the wooden block was being placed under the slabs.
If it happened from either of these causes the defendant was not liable, for if the plaintiff must take notice, as we have seen, of the simple rule of gravitation that slabs so situated might tilt, and it was his duty, when placing the wooden block under them, to brace them with one hand to prevent that tilting, the accident was the result of his failure so to brace them and he cannot recover. On the other hand if it happened because of the failure either of his brother to brace or steady the stone, or because of some movement of the crane by the operator thereof, there can be no recovery because they were each his fellow servants engaged with him in the same line of employment, all working under the same foreman and in the prosecution of the same work, and neither having the right to give orders to the other. Cooper’s Admr. v. Oscar Daniels Co., 29 K. L. R. 1172; Dana v. Blackburn, 121 Ky. 706.
There was a failure to show negligence upon the part of the master; the real cause of the accident is speculative under the evidence, and the most reasonable
Judgment affirmed.