230 Pa. 328 | Pa. | 1911
Opinion by
We are all of opinion that this case was for the jury, and that the learned court erred in directing a nonsuit.
Anthony J. Kearns, the minor plaintiff, was and had been for two years prior to the accident employed as a "spell hand” at the defendant’s rolling mill located at Duquesne in Allegheny county. His duty was to relieve at intervals the manipulator at the thirty-eight inch blooming mill. The manipulator operates the hydraulic lever that turns over the steel billets before they enter the rolls. .
In the evening of March 19, 1904, Kearns was ordered by Causler, the foreman, to go down into the pit for the purpose of assisting in changing the rolls. This pit is about twenty feet long, five or six feet wide, and from twelve to fifteen feet deep. It is dark, and is described by the witness Gallagher as "a kind of a miserable place, greasy and all like that, and water pipes running past there.” While Kearns had been employed for two years as a “spell hand” at these works, he had never entered the pit for the purpose of changing the rolls. As he was starting into the pit he said to the foreman, according to his testimony: “I don’t know anything about it, I don’t understand it.” Kearns also said to the foreman: “You had better come down with me,” to which the latter replied: “You had better go down, I will tell you what to do when you go down.” He then described what occurred at the time and immediately before the accident as follows: “He [Causler] said to me, ‘You go ahead.’ And he handed me a torch, and I went on down in the pit, crawled back on the steelyard, and got on the weight, and he hollered down to me, ‘Watch your head, I am going to throw down the chain to you.’ He throwed the chain down. I asked him what I was to do with it. He said, ‘You put that along the beam.’ And I put it around the
The pit work, as stated by the learned trial judge, consisted in placing a chain lowered from the crane over the end of the steelyard beam. This beam raised a heavy weight, and when the beam was raised to the top of the pit the plaintiff’s duty was then to place a link over the end of the beam to hold it in place, thus releasing the rolls so that the change could be made. This work had to be done in the pit and by the aid of a torch which was carried by the person performing the service.
The negligence charged against the defendant company was the failure to instruct the plaintiff in the performance of his duties in the pit. The learned judge, however, held that the risks or dangers incident to the work to be done in the pit by the plaintiff were obvious, and such as would be apparent to any one exercising the care required under the circumstances. He, therefore, held that there was no duty resting on the defendant to give the plaintiff instruction how to perform his duties and to avoid the perils of the service in the pit, and directed a nonsuit.
It is true, as suggested by the learned court in the opinion refusing to take off the nonsuit, that the plaintiff had been employed about the mill for four years prior to the accident, but it is equally true and not disputed that he was never down in this pit and was never called upon to perform the duties required of him when he entered the pit. on this occasion. He had relieved the manip
It is the duty of an employer not only to instruct an employee, ignorant of the dangers incident to his work by reason of age, inexperience or other causes, but also to
The judgment is reversed, and a venire facias, de novo awarded.