104 S.W. 860 | Ct. App. Ind. Terr. | 1907
December 6, 1901, appellant was operating a coal mine, and appellee was there employed as a coal digger, and occasionally drove the mine mules in hauling out loaded cars, and returning the empties. On this day, by request of the pit boss, appellee took the place of a driver, and was furnished a mule that had been used in the mine a few weeks, and was not well broken to the work, and the proof shows was
Appellant has appealed, and assigns over 30 grounds of error. We deem it only necessary to consider the one refused by the court to instruct the jury to return a verdict for the defendant. The pivotal question presented by thé record is whether or not the appellee, when he returned to work with the mule after its plunging, kicking, turning and breaking from the loaded car, in the forenoon, and running out of the mine into the open, assumed the risk of using it afterward. It is a clear and well-settled legal proposition that a servant cannot recover of the master for personal injury suffered while engaged in the master's employ, where the injury may be attributed to the negligence of the servant, or where the facts and circumstances clearly show that the injury was the result of the assumption of the risk of danger apparent at the time to the servant, or which, from the nature of the employment, he should have known by the exercise of reasonable care. The distinction between contributory negligence and assumed risk is not made clear by the books. It is said that they may, and sometimes do, rise out of the same facts, as when the danger is not only known or obvious, but injury therefrom so imminent that no
It is likewise clear that the appellee does not come within any of the exceptions to assumed risk, one of which is where the servant, knowing of the existence of the defect, complains of it to the master, who promises to right it. In reliance of such promises, the servant may justify the continued use of the defective article, thing, machinery, or animal, until a reasonable time shall have passed for such repair, without being charged with assumption of the risk. Purcel M. & E. Co. vs Kirkland
In the case of St. Louis Cordage Co. vs Miller, 126 Fed. 499, 61 C. C. A. 477, 63 L. R. A. 551, a young woman of 20 was held to be of mature years and subject to the rule of assumed risk. Likewise, in the same circuit, it ivas held by the Circuit Court of Appeals in Haas vs Balch, 56 Fed. 984, 6 C. C. A. 201, that, when the employe is of mature years, and ordinary intelligence, and has equal knowledge with the master of the risk that may reasonably be apprehended, the employe is bo.und to exercise his own judgment as to whether he will subject himself to the known dangers of the situation. In other words, the law will not allow a servant to gamble upon the chances of getting hurt, under such circumstances, and, in case he loses, compel recovery from his master. Showalter vs Fairbanks, Morse & Co., 88 Wis. 376, 60 N W. 257; 1 Labatt on M. & S. 1266; Toomey vs Eureka I. & P. Works, 89 Mich. 249, 50 N. W. 850; Linch vs Sagamore Mfg. Co., 143 Mass. 206, 9 N. E. 728; Bradshaw’s Adm’r vs L. N. R. Co., 21 S. W. 346, 14 Ky. Law Rep. 688; Anderson vs Akeley Lumber Co., 47 Minn. 128, 49 N. W. 664; Ft. Worth Iron Works vs Stokes, 33 Tex. Civ
Another trial cannot result differently, for this opinion is based upon the testimony of the appellee, and necessarily' determines that appellee has not a cause of action for the injury set forth in his complaint, and, as any amendment must conform to his testimony, it follows that the judgment of the court below is reversed, and remanded, with directions to dismiss the action.