196 Ky. 467 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1922
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
The appellee, George Henry, as administrator of the estate of Horace Henry, deceased, recovered in this action in the court below a verdict and judgment against the appellant, John Barton Payne, agent of the President of the United States, in control of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad, of $3,000.00, in damages for the death of his intestate, caused, as alleged, by the negligence of the railroad company and its agents and servants. The judgment, and refusal of a new trial to the appellant, resulted in this appeal.
Horace Henry, the de'cedent, was drowned in the Kentucky river near West Irvine, Estill county, caused by his falling or being thrown from a small boat into that stream while in the employ of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company and engaged in the work of recovering from the waters of the river crossties belonging to it which, after being floated to West Irvine in rafts, had broken loose and become scattered along the banks of the river. According to the evidence heard on the trial, which was uncontradicted, the decedent was at the time of his death but nineteen years of age, without experience in the work in which he was engaged and, though a fairly good swimmer, was totally unskilled in boating and especially boat rowing, indeed, the work was his first and only work of the kind. Owing to a “rise” of from twelve to fifteen feet in the Kentucky river and the unusual depth and extraordinary swiftness of the currents where he was rescuing crossties, the work of the decedent was attended with great risk and danger. He was employed to perform the work required of him by William Corey, the appellant’s agent and foreman having authority to make the employment, and began the work with Adam Corey, another employe of appellant, on the morning of the day his-life ended. The Coreys were brothers and uncles of the decedent. Upon arriving at the place of work in the morning the latter and Adam Corey by direction of William Corey borrowed of one Horn, who with his family' lived in a house boat above and near
It is insisted for the appellant that the judgment should be reversed because the trial court erred: (1) In overruling the demurrer to the petition as amended; (2) in instructing the jury; (3) in refusing certain instructions asked by the appellant. Regarding the first contention it is sufficient to say that the overruling of the demurrer was proper, because, fairly interpreted, the petition, as amended, states a cause of action for the recovery of damages upon the ground of failure of the appellant to furnish the decedent a reasonably safe place for the performance of the work required óf him. The danger attending the work mainly arose, it is true, out of the conditions encountered by the decedent in returning the boat, which was as much a part of the work required of him as was the duty enjoined by the foreman to get the boat .before beginning the work of recovering the crossties, and both of these duties were as much parts of the service required by his employment as was the actual work of gathering up the ties. Under the conditions existing the work of procuring the boat and of returning it was equally dangerous, and each of which was a duty the decedent’s inexperience and lack of skill in operating
In this view of the case, which we regard as sound, no reason is apparent for sustaining the appellant’s con.tention that the decedent’s death was caused by the negligence of his fellow servant Adam Corey, by whose direction or assent he attempted to return the boat.
The employer must use ordinary care to furnish the employe a reasonably safe place to perform the work required of him and this duty he cannot delegate to another and thereby escape the consequences of faihixe to provide a i*easonably safe place, to work. Even an experienced adult servant does not assume the risk arising out of the master’s negligent failure to provide him a safe place to work when he is ignorant of the danger; a fortiori is this true when the servant, by reason of his youth and inexperience, is disqualified to encounter the danger. Reffitt v. Southern Sheet & T. P. Co., 170 Ky. 362; C. & O. T. P. Co. v. Callahan, 148 Ky. 682. Here the decedent, notwithstanding his youth and ignorance of the dangel’ to be met in the work he was employed to do, was put at it by the appellant’s foreman, to whom his inexperience was known, without warning of the dangerous nature of the work or place Where it was to be performed and without instruction as to how the danger should be met; and in such case the appellant will not be relieved of responsibility for his death on the ground that it was caused by the negligence of a fellow servant in directing him to perform a cluty which he had previously been directed by their common superior the foreman to perform. Southern Ry. v. Hauck, 152 Ky. 498; Games & Co. v. Johnson, 133 Ky. 507. It is, therefore, concluded that the trial court did not err in refusing to give the offered instruction regarding the negligence of the fellow servant, Adam Corey, as on the facts of the case that question should not have been submitted to the jury.
As in our opinion the instructions of the court, in substantially correct terms, gave the jury the law of the case and its refusal of the rejected instructions was not error, the judgment is affirmed.