231 Pa. 631 | Pa. | 1911
Opinion by
It is well settled that it is the duty of an employer to .provide suitable appliances with which his employee, exercising due care for his own protection, can perform his
In the present case it appears that the plaintiff was injured by falling from the roof of a tank which he was painting. The record shows that he made a written statement of the facts of the accident, a few weeks after it occurred. In that statement he says: “On November 19, 1907, we were ordered to go to Twelfth street and Washington avenue to paint a tank there. I took my own rope down from the shop and rigged it myself on top of the tank. We had gotten down to the place about 9 A. m. and worked then until about 11.30 a. m., and I had finished almost all the top of the tank and at that time in some manner unknown to me, I fell from the top of the tank to the roof below. I do not know exactly how the thing happened, as I had almost finished and everything had worked all right up until the time the accident happened.” If the plaintiff had repeated this story exactly on the witness stand, he would have disclosed no right to recover against his employers, the defendants. But at the trial, while admitting everything else contained in the written statement, he denied that he had rigged the rope himself, and said that he asked the foreman to make a loop in the end of the rope, and tie a knot for him; and that the foreman did so. He further testified that he then took this rope to the roof of the tank, and fastened the loop over the knob at the apex of the roof, and that he held the rope in his left hand to support himself as he lay on the roof while painting with his right hand. He continued at this
, The assignments of error are sustained, and the judgment is reversed, and is here entered for the defendants.