168 Ind. 259 | Ind. | 1906
Appellee recovered a judgment for personal injuries received through the alleged negligence of appellant. Appellee was employed in appellant’s yards, and on the day of the injury was ordered to go into the shop and assist in shearing a large steel plate, and while so engaged was hurt by the falling of a pile of angle irons upon his leg. The negligence charged is the permitting of the shears to become and remain dull, the improper piling of the angle irons, and in permitting the angle irons, so improperly piled, to be and remain concealed in the shops at the place where the plaintiff was ordered to assist in the work of shearing. A demurrer to each of the two paragraphs of complaint was overruled, as was also appellant’s motion for judgment on the answers to interrogatories, and for a new trial.
It is alleged in the complaint that the plaintiff was employed to work in the yard, and was ordered by the defendant to go into the shop, where he was not acquainted, and assist in shearing a steel plate; that the shears pointed to the north; that the steel plate to be sheared was twenty feet long, four feet, four inches wide, and five-sixteenths of an inch thick; that the plate was suspended by chains to a hoist and rested immediately to the east of the shears; that it required from eight to ten men to do the shearing, which was accomplished by half the men pulling and half pushing the plate steadily and smoothly through the shears, from the north to the south; that the cuts were six inches wide and when a cut was finished it dropped to the west of the shears and the plate returned to the north and was again pulled and pushed through the shears as before.
The answers to the interrogatories show that the appellee is a man of average intelligence, good eyesight, and experienced in working with and about iron. He had been for three weeks employed by appellant as a general workman in the yard, and on one previous occasion had been sent into the shop to assist in shearing steel plates, but helping to shear steel plates was not within the scope of his employment. On the occasion of his injury, the appellee, with others from the yard, was sent into the shop to help shear. When they arrived the plate was in position for shearing. The appellee took his place at the southeast corner of the plate. At the time there were two single tiers of angle irons, twelve to sixteen inches high, on the floor of the shop, and east of the shears, and which the appellee could not see by looking down. The angle irons were improperly piled and the appellant knew it, and they were piled by order of the shop-foreman. It was the custom of the shop to pile
Erran the averments of the complaint and the facts disclosed by the answers to interrogatories, appellant argues that the appellee’s injuries from the falling irons were an assumed risk of employment. Its contention being that since it was common to pile the irons by the shears to remain only temporarily, and until they could be removed by other employes to the bolting rack, they formed only a transient, shifting condition usual to all similar establishments, and therefore a danger that all employes must be held to have assumed. If the appellee had been employed to work in the shop and was familiar with the conduct of the business therein, and such a piling of iron was customary and necessary to a reasonable and economical dispatch of business, then we should have a very different question. But the appellee was employed to do general work in the yard, the evidence shows, to pile iron, load and unload ears, and such other work as was required to be done about the yard.
The instruction condemned in the case last cited, when requested by the defendant, read thus: “If it affirmatively appears from the evidence that the plaintiff did not use due care to discover the approach of the cars on the defendant’s track before he attempted to cross the same, he cannot recover for any alleged negligence of the defendant.” Before giving, the court modified the same by adding: “But the burden of proving contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff rests on the defendant.” It will be observed that the instruction as requested was absolutely correct and complete within itself. In effect, it-directed the jury that if it affirmatively appeared—that is, if it appeared by a fair preponderance of the evidence—that the plaintiff did not use due care, he could not recover. The first part of the instruction rightly advised the jury that they might look to all the evidence generally for proof of the appellee’s contributory negligence, and when the court added, “but' the burden of proving contributory negligence on the part
Besides there is nothing held in this case that conflicts with the holding in the case of Indianapolis St. R. Co. v. Taylor, supra. It.was there said on page 279: “By another instruction, the court correctly informed the jury that the contributory negligence, if any, of appellee was a defense to the first and second paragraphs of the complaint, and the burden of proving the same was upon the appellant.” In the case at bar the jury could not possibly have been misled, because the court in other numbers fully and specifically covered the question of proving contributory negligence. In number fourteen the rule was stated more favorably to the appellant than it had a right to have it.
Since the case of Indianapolis St. R. Co. v. Taylor, supra, and claiming to be influenced thereby, a question relating to the proper mode of instructing the jury concerning contributory negligence has arisen in the following cases, besides the one at bar: Cleveland, etc., R. Co. v. Miles (1904), 162 Ind. 646; Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Lightheiser (1904), 163 Ind. 247; Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Collins (1904), 163 Ind. 569; and perhaps some others.
The last two cases cited rest upon their own peculiar facts. In the case of Cleveland, etc., R. Co. v. Miles, supra, there appears a remark, on page 656, not in accord with the views of the court upon further consideration. We here reiterate and follow the doctrine declared in M. S. Huey Co. v. Johnston (1905), 164 Ind. 489, and Town of Winamac v. Stout (1905), 165 Ind. 365, 367.
There had been evidence tending to prove defects in the shears, and the effect thereof on the plate while being sheared, at variance with the allegations of the original complaint, and the amendment was requested and granted for the purpose of making the averments conform to the proof as already delivered. The contention was that the ■defect in the shears produced an irregular, jagged edge or surface to the plate, which caused it to hang and adhere to the shears, so that it had to be tilted upward and downward to free it. The evidence which prompted the amend
If the shears were so defective as to produce rough protuberances that would cause the plate to fasten to the shears; so that it had to be tilted to loosen, it, it was wholly immaterial whether such protuberances were on the upper or lower edge of the plate. We cannot see how the same evidence would not be pertinent in one case, as well as the other. Hence the amendment created no change in the issue, nor in the character of the proof.
Furthermore, since the jury found there was no evidence that the angle irons fell on the plaintiff from being struck by the tilted plate, the amendment could not have affected the case, one way or another, or have been in any way prejudicial to appellant. We think, therefore, that the court did not abuse its discretion, conferred by §399 Burns 1901, §396 R. S. 1881, in permitting the plaintiff to amend, and thereby make his pleading conform to his proof. For illustrative cases, see Burns v. Fox (1888), 113 Ind. 205; Kohli v. Hall (1895), 141 Ind. 411; Praigg v. Western Pav., etc., Co. (1896), 143 Ind. 358.
We find no error in the record. Judgment affirmed.