183 Ky. 367 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1919
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
Searcy Battle was an employ of the appellant, P. Ban-non Pipe Line Company. He was a strong, healthy man, thirty-six years of age, and of sober, industrious habits. He had been an employe of the appellant, for several months, and had been doing the same work for it, during that time. The appellant owned and operated a factory for the making of terra cotta tile, pipe, and brick, and used, for the purpose, large quantities of clay and shale. The clay and shale were brought to the factory in freight cars, which had doors, near each end of the cars, which could be opened, and the contents of the cars, allowed to drop underneath the cars. The cars were brought under a shed, attached to the factory, upon a switch, which connected with the main line of the .railroad, and underneath the shed, and below the surface of the floor, were two ‘ ‘ conveyors. ’ ’ The ‘ ‘ conveyors ’ ’ were troughs, the tops of which were even with the surface of the floor, and the exposed portions, were a length equal to the width of the switch track, and each of them, was about eighteen inches in width and about fifteen inches in depth. Within the trough, was a revolving shaft, which was armed with numerous sharp blades, set upon the shaft in a spiral fashion, making it into, a kind of giant screw. The shaft, at one end, was set in a fixed bearing, which held it in position, while at the other end, it was attached to a shaft, which, in turn, was attached to, and operated by a steam engine, within the factory buildings, and about fifty feet from the opening. This engine propelled all the machinery made use of at the factory. When the cars,
The administrator of decedent, instituted this action to recover the damages, suffered by the estate of decedent, because of his death, alleging, that the death was caused by the negligence of the employer. The appellant denied, that any negligence, upon its part, contributed to the decedent’s death, and in addition, interposed pleas of contributory negligence and assumption of risks upon the part of decedent, as the proximate cause of his death. The jury returned a verdict for appellee, and fixed the damages, at the sum of $1,500.00, and' a judgment was rendered accordingly. The appellant’s motion for a new trial being overruled, it has appealed, and urges, that the trial court erred in overruling its motion for a directed verdict, in its favor, at the close of the testimony for appellee, and at the close of all the testimony, as the only ground for a reversal.
If the facts, which the evidence for appellee tends to prove, are to be believed, and the inferences to be drawn therefrom, the negligence of Battle, would have only cost him his foot or a portion of his foot, and from such an injury, he would have escaped with his life, if the lever, which controlled the conveyor, had been in proper repair. Either Smith, alone, or he and the foreman, together, shifted the lever, instantly, upon discovering the peril of Battle, and if it had caused the revolving shaft to have instantly ceased, its movements, as the proof tends to show, it would have done, if not defective and in proper repair, his life 'would not have been sacrificed. The proof for appellee conduces to prove, that the lever, when shifted to stop the revolving shaft, failed to accomplish that purpose, and that the shaft did not cease to revolve, until the foreman had run to the engine, and procured its operation to cease. Assuming, then, for the jnesent, iliat the evidence was of such a character, as to require submission to the jury, upon the question, as to whether or not.the loss of his foot, alone, would not have caused his death, the question, then arises, as to whether or not, it -was a duty, which the appellant, as the master owed to the deceased, as its servant, to use ordinary care to maintain the lever and its adjustments, in such a condition, that it would perform its functions properly, and was its failure to do so, negligence as to him ?
It is insisted, that the negligence of the decedent, in stepping into the “conveyor” concurred in the negligence, if any, of the appellant, in failing to maintain the machinery in reasonably good repair, and for that reason, the appellee can not recover, because under such circumstances, the negligence of the decedent, was the proximate cause of his death, and in support of this contention, the principle, embodied in the cases of Bauer v. I. C. R. R. Co., 156 Ky. 183, and Smith v. C. N. O. & T. P. Ry. Co., 146 Ky. 568, are relied upon, but, they do not seem to be in point. Those were cases, wherein the injured parties were licensees, to whom the employees of the railroad company owed a lookout duty, but the negli
Although the employees of a railroad company do not owe any duty to a trespasser, except to avoid injury to him, if they can, after having knowledge of his peril, they do owe to him the latter duty, which the dictates of civilization provide as an obligation to every one, and if they injure a trespasser, when by ordinary care, after discovery of his peril, they could have avoided injury to him, their negligence is the proximate cause of his injury, although he was first negligent. It seems, from analogy to the above principles, that where a duty to avoid injury to any one, although he may be a trespasser, exists, that the duty requires, that although slight injury may be unavoidable, the duty is incumbent, not to inflict any greater injury, than can be avoided, although the injured one may, himself, have been negligent. The application of these principles does not involve any question of comparative negligence, but, defines the liability of each one for his own negligence.
The rule applying to negligence, as between master and servant, follows, the same rules, as above stated, and a' servant may recover, notwithstanding his own negligence, if the consequences of his negligence could have been avoided by the exercise of qrdinary care on the part of the master, with relation to such matters, about which it was the duty of the master to exercise reasonable care.
A rule of general application to the duties of a master, is, that, he owes his employees, the duty to be reasonably careful to prevent accidents and injuries to his servant, and his failure to do so, will render him liable, and he can not avoid the liability, unless the servant assumes the risk, or contributes to the injury by his own negligence, and among the primary duties, which rest upon the master, is to exercise care to provide a reasonably safe place for the servant to work, and reasonably safe
In the instant case, the “conveyor” was obviously a dangerous instrumentality. It was open and necessarily so, for the purposes for which it was used. It was in the very place of the servant’s work, and the machine with which it was his duty to work. It is a thing into which an employe, working about it, might fall, or inadvertently, step into. The master had provided it with the lever for the purpose of starting it into motion, or for stopping it, when necessity therefor occurred. While it was the duty of the servant to use care not to step into it, but, in assuming the risk of employment in working in the place, and in close proximity to the device, he had a .right to rely upon the fact, that it was so provided, that the use of the lever, would, instantly, stop its action. Hence, the master owed the servant the duty to use care to maintain the lever, in a reasonably good state of repair, so that it would perform the functions intended. Owing this duty, the appellant was not liable to the decedent, for any damages suffered by him for his negligent stepping into the ‘ ‘ conveyor, ’ ’ but he was liable for any damages suffered by the failure of the lever to stop the machine, if such failure was the result of negligence in keping the lever in repair, and which damages would not have been suffered except for the defects in the lever.
(b) It is insisted, that a verdict should have been directed for appellant, because, it is argued, that it is a mere matter of speculation to undertake to determine, that the crushing of decedent’s foot, and for which injury, the appellant is not liable, did not cause his death, but, that the additional injuries, which he suffered, because of the defective lever, did cause the death. The recovery can not be sustained, unless the defective lever was the proximate cause of the death. The proximate cause of death is the one, which causes the fatal injury. The fact, that decedent would have survived the crushing of his foot, is a fact, not impossible of demonstration by evidence. The common experience of men, teaches, that such a wound to a strong, healthy man, is not reasonably calculated to produce death. Such was the expert evi
One could not be excused for causing a death, by a fatal wound, because the victim was then suffering from an insignificant wound, which by reason of complications, might cause death.
The judgment is affirmed.