28 Ind. App. 362 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1902
Action hy appellee, as plaintiff, against appellant, to recover damages for a personal injury which he sustained while engaged in the service of appellant as an employe, which injury, it was alleged, was the result of appellant’s negligence. Answer in denial, jury trial, verdict and judgment for appellee in the sum of $5,000. Appellant’s demurrer to the complaint and its motion for a new trial were overruled, and these rulings are assigned as errors.
The case was tried on the second paragraph of complaint, and we will first consider its sufficiency. The complaint is very lengthy, hut the material averments may be stated as
“It is a rule of universal acceptance by the courts of this country that an employe assumes all the ordinary dangers of his employment, which are known to him, or which by the exercise of ordinary diligence could have been known to him.” Pennsylvania Co. v. Ebaugh, 152 Ind. 531; Chicago, etc., R. Co. v. Glover, 154 Ind. 584, and authorities there cited.
In a case of this character it is incumbent upon the plaintiff to show by the allegations of his complaint, not only that he was free from fault, but the risk was one not knowingly assumed as an incident of the service. If in this case appellee had knowledge or notice, either actual or implied, of the defective and dangerous way over which he had to pass in the discharge of his duty to appellant, and with such knowledge voluntarily proceeded to use the way, then these conditions became a risk which he voluntarily assumed. It follows that, in order to establish a breach of duty creating a cause of action against appellant, it was necessary to allege that appellee had no knowledge of or notice of the defective way that caused his injury. See, Cleveland, etc., R. Co. v. Parker, 154 Ind. 153, and authorities there cited.
A master is required to exercise reasonable care to provide reasonably safe working places, appliances, and machinery for his servants; but in suits by the servant against the master for his negligent failure to furnish a safe place in which to work, or safe appliances or machinery with -which to work, the law must now be regarded as settled that knowledge on the part of the servant is an independent element of liability, not included in the general averment of
The servant’s knowledge or want of knowledge must be specially alleged, because upon this depends whether or not he is to b^ held to have assumed the risk of the defect; assumption of the risk and contributory negligence being separate and independent factors. New Kentucky Coal Co. v. Albani, supra.
The rule is that what the employer specially engages is that he will not expose the employe to danger which is not obvious, or of which the latter has no knowledge or adequate apprehension, and which is not reasonably and fairly incident to and within the ordinary risks of the service which he engaged to perform. Guedelhofer v. Ernsting, 23 Ind. App. 188; Jenney Electric, etc., Co. v. Murphy, 115 Ind. 566.
It necessarily follows from these authorities that if the employe has knowledge, or might have had knowledge by the exercise of ordinary care, of the unsafe place where he is working, or of the dangerous or unsafe condition of machinery or appliances with which, he is working, and continues in the service of the master, in the absence of a promise to repair or make safe, then the servant assumes the risk incident to such conditions as well as the risk of any hazardous employment. Under the rules so firmly established, the complaint before us must be held bad if it fails to aver that appellee did not have knowledge of the unsafe condition of the passageway over which he was required to pass in the discharge of his duties.
It is clear that there is no direct averment of want of knowledge. The extremes! limit to which the complaint goes is to aver that, after, the appellant had repaired the
The meaning of the words “believe” -and “knowledge”, as defined by lexicographers will show that there is a distinct and well defined difference between them. “Believe”: “To exercise trust or confidence”.- — -Webster. “To exercise belief in; to be persuaded upon evidence, arguments, and deductions, or by other circumstances other than personal knowledge”. — Century Diet. “Knowledge”: 1 “The act or state of knowing; clear perception of fact; that which is or may be known”. — Webster. “Acquainted with things ascertained or ascertainable; specific information”. — Century Diet. We do not think it is necessary for us to attempt to enlarge upon the meaning of'these words as above defined.
The Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Iron Silver Mining Co. v. Reynolds, 124 U. S. 374, 8 Sup. Ct. 598, 31 L. Ed. 466, said: “Between mere belief and knowledge there is a wide difference”. This expression of Mr. Justice Eield, was used in criticising and holding erroneous an instruction of the United States Circuit Court for the district of Colorado, in which the words “belief”, and “ knowledge” were used interchangeably as conveying the -same meaning, and it was said: “The court could not make them synonymous by its charge”.
The most liberal construction «which can be given this pleading, under the allegations as to appellee’s belief or knowledge, is that appellee believed that if he took all the caution possible the platform or passageway was sufficiently strong to pass over the same safely. This language necessarily implies the antithesis of the proposition that if he did not use all possible care and caution he could not pass over it in safety, and implies that its condition, as known to
Appellee’s complaint is strongly against him on the question of knowledge. He avers that in January he notified appellant of the dangerous condition of the way; that the board on the walk next to the street had, from long’ use,, become worn and rotten; that said board was originally ten. inches wide; that at each end, by decay, etc., it had become only five incheswide, and that the decayed and missing’ part-of the board was on the same side at both ends, and that when appellant repaired the way this defective board had been taken from the end of the way next to the street and placed at the other end next to the building, and within ten inches of the steps.
The complaint does not state when the repairs were made, but it is fair to assume that they were made upon receiving notice of the defective condition of the platform. This was in January, and appellant’s injury occurred February 23rd, following. Pie had been in the constant employment of appellant for over five years, and was passing over this passageway daily. Removing the defective board from one end of the platform to the other could not make the defect less apparent. The defective board, to the ordinary observer*, was as plainly visible at one end of the passageway as at the other. A man with ordinary vision, with due regard for his safety, is required to use his sight as to where he is going and the character of the way over which he passes. The defect in the passageway over which appellee was required to pass daily in the discharge of his duties to his master was open and obvious, and appellee was chargeable with a knowledge of its condition. This being true, and his failure to aver a want of knowledge, he is chargeable with the assumption of the obvious risks incident to the character of the service in which he was engaged. The conclusion is irresistible that the complaint is insufficient..
Judgment reversed, and the court below directed to sustain the demurrer to the complaint.