176 A. 434 | Pa. | 1934
Plaintiff was employed by his father as manager of an automobile service station. On July 3, 1931, one Mumford, operating a truck belonging to defendant, stopped at the service station for the purpose of inflating a tire. Mumford was a regular customer of the station and, with plaintiff's permission, began to put air in the tire. In the course of this operation, however, the metal rim of the tire became loose, whereupon Mumford walked into the store run in connection with the service station and picked up a hammer that was on the counter, telling plaintiff he wished to use it to hammer a rim in place. Plaintiff told him not to use that hammer as it chipped around the edges but to find another one. Mumford placed it back on the counter and started to look for another hammer. Meanwhile plaintiff proceeded with his work about the station, and, presently, was required to walk over to another car. In so doing he passed within a few feet of where Mumford was working on the rim of his tire. The latter was using the hammer which he had been warned against using, *424 and as he struck a sharp blow on the metal rim a piece of steel chipped off from the head of the hammer and struck plaintiff in the left eye, resulting in the total destruction of its sight. In this action against Mumford's employer to recover damages for the loss of the eye, a judgment was entered for plaintiff, and this appeal by defendant followed.
Appellant contends that there was no breach of a legal duty in using the hammer in the condition in which it was found, and that, if there was no such breach, it was the duty of the court below to so declare; that a jury should not be permitted to find an act negligent which is less than the failure to discharge a legal duty: Bardis v. Phila. Reading Ry.,
Appellant has submitted a number of authorities which deal with the question of injuries which are the result of fortuitous circumstances such as in the light of common experience would not have been foreseen by a reasonable man using ordinary care. The cases cited refer to unusual, unforeseeable happenings, and in this they are clearly distinguished from the case at bar. Facts must be judged in the light of all the surrounding circumstances, and here the distinguishing circumstance is that appellant's employee was warned of the dangerous nature of the hammer before he used it. Appellant especially relies upon White v. Roydhouse,
Judgment is affirmed.