190 Ind. 57 | Ind. | 1921
— Appellee brought this action against appellant for damages on account of the death of her decedent alleged to have been caused by the negligence of appellant. The issues submitted to a jury were formed by an amended fourth paragraph of complaint, answered by a general denial, and by a paragraph averring that appellant and appellee’s decedent, at the time of the injury resulting in death, were engaged in interstate commerce, and under the federal Employer’s Liability Act (§§8657-8665 U. S. Comp. Stat. 1916, 35 Stat. at L. 65, 66, 291) decedent assumed the risks of his employment. There was a verdict in favor of appellee followed by a judgment in her favor. Appellant’s motion for a new trial was overruled,' and this ruling is the only error relied on for a reversal of the judgment.
The only questions presented in support of the motion for a new trial are: (1) Want of evidence to support the verdict; (2) that the court erred in giving instruction No. 15 on its own motion; (3) admission of certain evidence over appellant’s objection.
The evidence tends to show that at about eleven o’clock on the morning of July 17, 1913, decedent met with injuries which caused his death the following morning at eight o’clock; that at the time he received his injuries he was in the employment of appellant as a member of one of its bridge gangs, and engaged in repairing one of appellant’s bridges located about six miles west of Spencer, Indiana. This gang regularly consisted of ten men and a foreman, but on the day decedent was injured the gang consisted of eight men, who were, at this particular time, replacing old stringers with new ones. In order to keep the traffic on the road going, an old stringer would be taken out and a new one immediately put in its place. A new stringer was composed of' three pieces of pine timber, each eight inches thick and twenty inches wide, bolted together, and' estimated to weigh from 1,700 to 1,800 pounds. The old and new stringers were handled by means of a crab derrick fastened to a platform of an ordinary push car. The boom or mast of the derrick, to which a rope was attached, extended out over the side of the car. The new stringers were framed for use a short distance from the bridge. The car carrying the derrick was run down the track near the stringer, and the rope from the derrick hitched to it in such manner that the men on the car, by means of the derrick, raised it to a swinging position and then held it until other men
At the time of the accident, under the direction of the foreman, the members of the gang were engaged as follows: Two were acting as flagmen; one at each of the bolsters on which each end of the stringer would first rest; one on the balancing board; and decedent and two others were handling the cranks. Decedent alone was operating the crank on the east end of the crab and facing .south. His only experience at this particular work was on this bridge, but the length of time does not appear. The new stringer had been lowered almost to the bolsters when, on order of the foreman, it was raised about three inches. The derrick men were ordered to hold it in that position, and they did
The regular foreman of this bridge gang was not' with the men on the day of the accident, but under his direction some six or eight old stringers had been removed from the bridge and replaced by new ones. He testified, in substance, that he had used four men, two at each crank, because in his opinion it required that number, and that three men were insufficient, because the great weight of the stringers called for the full strength of three men for such’a period of time that they would likely become exhausted and weakened or, to use the language of the witness in part; “that period of duration (referring to the time these men had held the stringer in a swinging position) would work on a man until he would be so weak he probably would go blind, or couldn’t see, or something would happen to him.”
The complaint, after stating the business in which appellant was engaged, describing the bridge, the work in which the bridge gang was. engaged, the specific work of the decedent, the derrick and the purposes for which it was being used, charged that appellant was negligent : First, in operating the crab derrick with an insufficient number of men; second, in directing the. decedent to operate one of the cranks to the derrick without any assistance, which work, on account of the weight of the stringers and being unassisted, required him to step from one side of the platform to the other and around the end of the shaft and face in the op
We are further convinced that there was evidence before the jury from which it could find by whom decedent was employed when injured, the work in which he was engaged when injured, the time when he was injured,.the place where the injuries occurred, how he was injured, the cause of his injuries, and the extent
We therefore hold that appellant has not shown reversible error, and the judgment is affirmed.