124 Ky. 527 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1907
Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
To reverse a judgment rendered against it in behalf of appellee, this appeal is prosecuted.
The facts exhibited by the record may be thus stated: Appellee, at the time of the injury, was employed in the pantry of the Galt House. She was 31 years of age, and had previously worked in the kitchen. The kitchen is situated on the second floor, and the dining room and cafe on the first floor, adjacent to the pantry. The communication between the kitchen and pantry was by means of a dumb waiter moved by an electric motor. Through this the food was sent down from the kitchen, and the soiled dishes sent up from the pantry. On the kitchen floor a servant of appellant received the food, put it in the dumb waiter, and sent it down to the pantry, and likewise received the soiled dishes sent back, and delivered them to the kitchen. Appellee’s duties were to take the dishes with food on them out of the dumb waiter when it came down to the pantry. The waiter was started either up or down by pulling a small cable rope, and it could be started from either the kitchen or pantry. The servant in either place, by pulling the rope, could send the waiter up> or down at his pleasure. A speaking tube was supplied, by means of which the persons' in the kitchen and pantry could communicate with each other; but they could also speak through the well of the dumb waiter. Appellee
The negligence complained of in the petition is thus stated: “She says that said injuries were caused by reason of the dangerous and defective condition of the said elevator, in that it was without suitable locks and brakes to render it impossible to be moved upwards while removing articles from the same; that said elevator was in said dangerous condition by and through the gross negligence and carelessness of the defendant, and that said defects were known to the defendant, or could, by the exercise of ordinary care, have been known to it, and Was unknown to the plaintiff. ’ ’ It will be observed that the gist of the complaint is the failure to have the waiter equipped with suitable locks or brakes to prevent it from being moved upwards while articles were being taken from it. There is no complaint that the dumb waiter was defective in any other respect, so. that the liability of appellant depends on the question whether or not it was its duty to have this waiter equipped with a device that would prevent it/from being moved-or started upwards without the consent and assistance
The law in relation to the duty of employers in respect to machinery like the elevator in question is very well settled in this State. In fact, this court has followed the rule generally approved, and -thus stated by Shearman & Redfield in their work on Negligence, section 195: “The master is not bound.to provide the very best materials, implements, or accommodations which can be procured, nór those which are absolutely the most convenient or most safe. His duty is sufficiently discharged by providing those which are reasonably safe and fit. Still less is he bound to furnish every new improvement or invention, but he may wait where the question of safety is involved until an alleged improvement has been tested and has come into somewhat general use. Only such appliances, safeguards and tests as are usual, can be required.” And in Thompson on Negligence (section 3993), where the following rule is thus laid down: “The master is not under an obligation under all the circumstances to make use of the best and safest known appliances and instruments, nor is he responsible for failure to discard one which is not of the safest possible kind which can be secured, and to supply
In all occupations, where machinery is employed the servant must, in the very necessity of things, take and assume some risk. The master is not an insurer of the person of his employes against injury incurred in his service, nor is he required to warrant the safety or sufficiency of the machinery or premises. When the appliance or machine or premises furnished is reasonably safe, measured by the use to which it is put, his duty is fully performed. And, under the operation of this sound rule, it is said in Thompson on Negligence (section 3993) that: “It is not sufficient that there are later or safer appliances to be had, but that supplied must have some radical fault, or its use have become so generally obsolete or supplanted by others superior thereto that its adoption or retention will itself indicate negligence.” There- is evidence tending to show that the injuries appellee received resulted from the negligence of a fellow servant, but, in view of the conclusion we have reached, we do not deem it necessary to consider this question.
Wherefore, the judgment is reversed, with direc- ' tions for a new trial.