101 Ky. 212 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1897
delivered the opinion of the court.
Appellant, while a carpenter engaged in the service of appellee, was injured in 'his knee, and brought suit against appellee for damages for the injury, which he alleged to have been caused by a defective turntable.
The turntable at one end wa>s fixed as on a pivot, and the other end, which was mounted on a truck, could be moved along a curved rail, describing the quadrant of a circle and connecting with ten tracks which diverged from the quadrant. The table was in a pit about two feet deep, surrounded
Appellant with the other men in shop 16 was called on by the foreman the first day of his employment in that particular shop to move a car to track No. 10. No directions were given as to how it should be moved, but three of the men pushed on the east side and three, including the appellant, pulled on the; south side. On the following day they were directed to move a car to track No. 1, and appellant was one of three "who pulled toward the east side. As the table approached track No. 1 appellant^ not observing his proximity to the wall, was caught by the leg between the table and the angle of the recess and his knee injured, from the effects of which he was confined eighteen days, and went on crutches for some time longer.
It is claimed that the turntable was defective in that there was no appliance whereby it could be moved without going into the pit, and that appellant was misled into supposing that the east side of the pit was like the south side.
In this case it was not shown that the appliance was defective. The trial court, as we think, properly sustained appellee’s motion for a peremptory instruction, and the judgment is affirmed.