142 Ky. 842 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1911
Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
Appellant, Kentucky Wagon Manufacturing ■ Company, has on its premises a water tower consisting of a steel structure sixty-three feet high, on top of which is situated a tank sixteen feet high. The steel structure consists of twelve perpendicular posts of standard steel, six and one-half inches in diameter, set in the form of a maltese cross. Of these posts, the inside four are seven feet apart. To the rear of these and fourteen feet therefrom, the other eight posts are set. The whole trestle is built on concrete piers sunk in the ground. At four points, viz., at twelve, twenty-four, thirty-six and forty-eight feet above the ground, these perpendicular posts are braced by horizontal three-inch standard steel pipes. Each square or rectangle formed by the perpendicular posts and horizontal pipes is braced and held in position by two three-quarter-inch wrought iron rods, running diagonally 'between the corners in the shape of the letter “X.” From the center of the bottom of the water tank two water pipes, one six and one eight inches in diameter, encased in a wooden boxing three feet square, extend to the ground. To keep these pipes from getting out of plumb or from buckling, an iron guy rod five-eighths of an inch in diameter is run from each of the four six and one-half-inch inner posts through the wooden casement and screwed for three-eighths of an inch into an iron collar which encircles the two water pipes. Each of these guy rods is fitted into a boss on the iron castings on the uprights. These guy rods are situated at the second and fourth cross sections, which are, respectively, twenty-four and forty-eight feet from the ground.
Appellee, C. W. Gossett, while engaged in painting appellant’s water tower,, stepped upon one of the five
Appellee is a contract painter, and his specialty is the painting of high and dangerous- places-, such as smoke stacks, towers and bridges. WTien engaged in such work he always furnished his rigging. This he did on the occasion of his injury. His rigging consisted of a boatswain seat (that is, a seat suspended by ropes on block and tackle), two long poles with a hook upon them, and some light planks or boards about nine feet long to reach across from one brace of the structure to another, seven feet away, thereby making a temporary floor from which he could do the work.
In October, 1908, appellee entered into a contract with appellant, by which he agreed to paint the water tower, including all parts thereof, for the sum of $40. About a week thereafter he brought his rigging and went up to the top of the tower to see about hooking the rigging on. He found that the shingle roof was in bad condition. He then says, “I told Mr. Waters (the superintendent) about it, and he said, ‘Well, throw it off, and I will give you $5 more.’ I said, ‘What is the condition of the steel work under the tank?’ He said, ‘That is first class, that is all right, that is in first class condition and will hold anything. ’ I told him all right. ’ ’ Appellee further testified that the structure was so complicated and close together ■that he could not paint it unless he climbed in and out on the different parts thereof.
Appellee began work on Monday morning. He worked from Monday until Friday noon. At that time he was standing on one of the cross pipes or rods with his weight thereon. He was then engaged in moving his rigging. At the time he had one of the poles in his hand. While looking up he stepped to the side on one of the guy rods running from the cross bars to the wooden casement. He did this, he says, for the purpose of 'balancing or steadying himself. He had stepped upon similar rod's before, but always did so very lightly. The guy rod gave way and appellee was precipitated to the ground. In falling he struck upon some of the cross bars.
The guy rod was bent some four or five inches by the. weight of appellee. A small piece of the boss, of triangular shape, about an inch wide at the base and gradually tapering to a point about an inch from the base, was. found to be broken out. In the. opinion of one of the witnesses-, that part of the casting from which this piece was broken looked like an old rust. He made this examination, however, about four days after the accident. The superintendent testified that he was unable to say how old the rust was; it might have been several months old. Other witnesses said the rust might have looked ■old after the lapse of a few days. The guy rod was not constructed to be used for the purpose of a cross strain, but only to hold the center iron pipes in position; for that purpose only the tensile strength of the guy rod was called into play. Appellant’s superintendent admitted that he expected appellee to paint the entire structure; and to do this he knew he would have to go in on the cross parts of the under structure. Wherever his duty called him on that structure, he had to go. This witness denies giving to appellee any assurance of safety. The evidence further shows that the water tower was well and substantially built, and that all parts thereof were sufficient fon the purposes for which they were intended. There is; some evidence to the effect that a structure like that ought to be inspected every few months, but the weight of the evidence is that such a structure would last for a great many years; that the chief way of preserving it is to paint it, and that this had been done some two or three times, and that appellee was then engaged for the. same purpose.
Appellee predicates his right to go to the jury ‘on three propositions: .First, that the superintendent admitted that he knew appellee, in painting the structure', would have to paint all parts of it, and would have to go in on the cross bars; second, that there was evidence
In the ease of Saunders v. Eastern Hydraulic, et al., Co., 44 Atl. (N. J.), 630, it was held that the master’s duty to take reasonable care to have the place, in which he directs a servant to work, safe for that purpose, does not require him to furnish a mullion of a window in a flat roof strong enough to bear the weight or any part of the weight of a servant directed to go upon 'the roof and replace a pane of glass in the window. In discussing the question the court said:
“The purpose of the mullion in this skylight was to aid in the support of the panes of glass. The master’s duty was to have it so- constructed as to- reasonably answer that purpose, but it is impossible to discover any ground in reason for imposing on the master any duty to have it so constructed as to have it bear the weight or any part of the weight of a servant, although engaged in repairing it. The duty of the master in this respect is like that of one who invites another to make use of some place or appliance, and is limited to the care requisite for the reasonable use thereof for the purposes for which it is designed.”
Suppose, in the ’above case, the master had assured the servant that the roof was safe; would the principle have been different? Manifestly not. The doctrine of fhe above case finds support in Creberry v. National Transit Co., 28 N. Y. Supp., 291, where the plaintiff was injured by the giving way of a stay lath of a scaffold 'while he was leaning against it, and it appeared that the lath was intended merely to keep the posts upright and there was no evidence that it was. insufficient for that purpose. To the same effect is Schmidt v. Leistekow, 43 N. W. (N. D.), 821. In the last case, a miller in the defendant’s employ was injured by the- giving way of a spout in the mill used for passing mill stuffs from one part of the mill to another, but upon which plaintiff had climbed to reach to a certain place. The spout was in its proper place, and was secured for the purpose for which it was intended. The court held that the defendant was
This is not a case where the master imposed a new use upon a place or a new function upon an instrumentality. Even if he assured appellee that the steel structure was all right and would hold anything, he had no reason to anticipate that appellee would extend that assurance beyond the fair import of the words used, and make it include an iron rod no larger than a man’s little finger — a rod so small that the danger of stepping upon it and subjecting it to such a strain must have been apparent to one of appellee’s experience in such matters. If appellee intentionally stepped upon the guy rod, he assumed the risk. If he lost his balance and unwittingly placed his foot upon the guy rod for the purpose of .-Tea-dying himself, his injury was the result of an accident. In neither case is appellant liable.
We, therefore, conclude that the trial court erred in failing to award • appellant a peremptory instruction.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded for a new trial consistent with this opinion.