49 Ga. App. 846 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1934
S. C. Hicks, a former employee of the Louisville and Nashville Eailroad Company, brought suit against the company for damages for personal injuries in the sum of $50,000 and recovered, a verdict and judgment for $9000. The action was brought under the Federal employers’ liability act. The defense of the railroad company was that “from the ordinary hazard of his employment, which he fully understood and voluntarily assumed,” the defendant assumed the risk, and that the injury complained of arose out of an ordinary hazard of his employment.
The evidence for the plaintiff showed that he had been in the employ of the defendant company for nearly twenty years, and that he, at the time he was injured, was employed as a fireman operating a train between Marietta, Georgia, and Ellijay; that while in the act of firing the engine on this particular trip, plaintiff observed that the coal feed stopped, and he took his coal-pick and dug into the coal and found a large lump. He attempted to burst the lump by striking it with a coal-pick, and in striking it a small particle flaked from the same and struck him in the left eye and caused the loss of his eyesight. It was pleaded and admitted that the following rule was in effect at the time: “Coal will be broken to the proper .size for firing and will be kept within reach of the fireman, it being the intent that the coal be handled but once with the shovel.” The plaintiff testified that he was accustomed ,to the
This action, while brought under the Federal employers’ liability act, was not predicated on the violation of a Federal statute for the protection of employees; hence the doctrine of the assumption of risk was available as a complete defense, and no presumption of negligence existed against the defendant, since the employee assumes the ordinary risks incident to his employment. Southern Ry. Co. v. Simmons, 24 Ga. App. 96; Southern Ry. Co. v. Blackwell, 20 Ga. App. 630 (93 S. E. 321). In Gray v. Garrison, 49 Ga. App. 472 (176 S. E. 412), it was said that the assumption of the risk arises out of contract, which condition may be implied from the conduct of the plaintiff, which of itself may amount to a waiver of the duty owing by the defendant to the plaintiff. In Brown v. Rome Machine &c. Co., 5 Ga. App. 142 (62 S. E. 720), it was said: “These implied obligations and assumptions which the law adds to the express agreements in all contracts are familiar to lawyers and laymen alike; they are simply inferences which the courts draw from the transaction, on the ground that the parties naturally must have intended them. Confronted with the proposition of being required to work under an unsafe system, at an unsafe place, with incompetent fellow servants, or with unsafe instrumentalities, the servant would have the right of abandoning the contract and suing the master for breaching it as to this material, though implied, portion of it. However, if he knows the actual condition of things when he contracts, or if he
It can not be doubted, under the evidence in this case, that the ■plaintiff was fully aware of the fact that coal at times contains slate, and that lumps of coal or slate, when struck by a pick, would probably burst and cause particles or fragments thereof to scatter in all directions. It is also in evidence that he took no precaution to avoid injury because of such fragments, and that he did not wear any goggles at any time to protect his eyes. The evidence discloses that he fully knew and understood that such was and would be the natural and probable result of striking a lump of coal or slate with a pick. It is fairly inferable that such an occurrence was a frequent happening. Nevertheless, this plaintiff in line of his duty and even though the railroad company did not furnish to him coal that might be handled at all times with a shovel, acted in the face of an obvious danger with full knowledge of its consequences, and for this reason the evidence failed to support the verdict, and it was error for the court to overrule the motion for new trial.
Judgment reversed.