159 Ind. 557 | Ind. | 1902
— This action was instituted by appellee in the Hamilton Circuit Court, and thereafter venued to the Tipton Circuit Court. The purpose of the suit is to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by appellee while in the employ of appellant on October 21, 1899, at the city of Noblesville, on account of the turning of a chord of a truss upon which he was standing engaged at work at the time of the alleged accident. A trial resulted in appellee being awarded, by the general verdict of the jury, damages in the sum of $3,000, and over appellant’s motion for a new trial judgment was rendered thereon.
The errors assigned relate to the overruling of the demurrer to the complaint for insufficiency of facts, and in overruling the demurrer addressed to each of three paragraphs of the complaint on the ground that neither of said paragraphs stated a cause of action, and in denying the motion for & new trial.
We have not been favored with a brief on the part of appellee in this appeal. It appears, however, that after some twenty days or more beyond the time allowed under rule twenty-one pertaining to the Supreme and Appellate Courts for appellee to file a brief, he applied to the Appel
It will be observed that rule twenty-three exacts of the appellee the duty in his brief to point out any omissions or inaccuracies in the statement made by appellant in respect to the record. It is evident, therefore, that these respective rules subserve another important purpose in the furtherance of business pending in this court; that is, that all of the members thereof will be enabled to consider the errors involved through and by means of an examination of the respective briefs, without necessarily being required to resort to an inspection of the transcript. In the absence of a brief on appellee’s part in this appeal, the statements made by appellant in his brief in respect to the complaint and other portions of the record stand undisputed, and we, in obedience to the rule in question, must treat and consider-the same as accurate and true, and are not required to examine the record in order to discover if there are any omissions or inaccuracies in such statement; for this duty,
Appellant’s statement of the record discloses that the first paragraph of the complaint alleges that the plaintiff was employed by the defendant as a common laborer to work on the building; that he was inexperienced, and not a skilled workman, and of this fact the defendant had knowledge; that on or about October 21,- 1899, while the plaintiff was so employed about the building, defendant’s superintendent “carelessly and negligently ordered him to climb upon a plate or chord constituting a part of the building, — which order plaintiff was bound to obey,' — and to throw down some planks or boards; that the plaintiff did not assist in constructing the chord, and did not know how it was placed and held in position, and did not know how it should be held or fastened in position; that he did not know .of the unsafe condition of said chord or plate, or that the same was not properly fastened and tied in position; that the defendant and its said superintendent knew at the time plaintiff was ordered upon said plate or chord to throw down said planks or boards that said plate or chord was not tied and fastened and was unsafe to go upon, and was liable to turn or fall when said boards or planks were thrown down, and to throw plaintiff, off and fall upon and injure him,” etc. After the averment of these facts it is alleged “that while plaintiff was in the performance of his work in throwing down said planks or boards, and while exercising due care and diligence, said plate or chord suddenly, without any warning whatever, turned and fell and threw plaintiff violently to the ground, thereby injuring him,” etc. These are all of the facts, as we take them from the statement of appellant, which can be said to show that appellant, as the master, had violated some duty which he owed to appellee as its servant. When reduced to a simple proposition they may he said to show: (1) That appellee was an unskilled or inexperienced workman, of which fact
It is evident that the pleading in question does not respond to the requirements of the rules which we assert, for there is an entire absence of any positive or direct charge to show that the chord of the truss which turned and threw appellee to the ground was unsafe or defective, or that the place to which he was directed to go and engage in throwing down boards was one of danger. The paragraph, at least for the reasons stated, was insufficient on demurrer. From the statements made by appellant’s counsel, the second paragraph of complaint is open to the same objections imputed to the first, and at least for the same reasons is bad.
. The judgment is therefore reversed, and the cause rer manded to the lower court, with instructions to sustain the demurrer to the first and second paragraphs of the complaint, with leave to appellee, if requested, to amend his complaint.