166 Ind. 267 | Ind. | 1905
—This action was brought in the Hamilton Circuit Court by appellee to recover damages for a personal injury sustained while in appellant’s employ. The venue was transferred to the Tipton Circuit Court, and, upon appeal from a judgment rendered therein, this court held the original complaint insufficient. McElwaine-Richards Co. v. Wall (1902), 159 Ind. 557. An amended complaint, consisting of two paragraphs, was subsequently filed, and demurrers to the same were overruled. The issues were closed by an answer in general denial, and a trial by jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for appellee.
Appellant alleges that there was error in overruling demurrers to each paragraph of amended complaint, in overruling appellant’s motion for judgment npon the answers of the jury to interrogatories submitted, notwithstanding the general verdict, and in overruling the motion for a new trial.
Just prior to the time appellee was injured appellant’s superintendent, Hinds, directed him and John McClain,
The first paragraph of the amended complaint alleges that appellant’s superintendent carelessly and negligently ordered and directed appellee to go upon said chord of
The second paragraph avers that appellant’s superintendent carelessly and negligently ordered appellee to throw down some planks or hoards, one end of which rested on said chord; that in pursuance of such order he went upon said chord; that the same was a dangerous and unsafe place in which to work, and had been constructed and left in a careless and negligent manner. It is thus manifest that appellee’s right of recovery is grounded upon his obedience to a specific order of the master, which exposed him to unusual danger without previous warning of his peril, or subsequent precaution for his safety.
The following paragraph from the opinion in Stuart v. New Albany Mfg. Co., supra, is peculiarly applicable: “It
In. the case of Southern Ind. R. Co. v. Harrell, supra, this court, in construing the second subdivision of the employers’ liability act (§7083 Burns 1901, Acts 1893, p. 294, §1), said: “That subdivision was not intended to create a liability based on an order or direction, where such order or direction was as broad as the whole service, and where the injured servant, without the compulsion of an order or direction from one whose order or direction he was required to obey, was at the time governing himself according to his own judgment as to what was proper.”
It is expressly found by the jury that there was nothing about the construction of the truss or chord that a man of ordinary intelligence could not understand, and that appel
Appellant’s motion for judgment upon the answers of the jury to the interrogatories, notwithstanding the general verdict, should have been sustained, and for the error in overruling such motion the judgment must be reversed.
The judgment is reversed, with directions to sustain appellant’s motion for judgment in its favor upon the interrogatories to the jury and the answers thereto, notwithstanding the general verdict.