114 Ky. 1 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1902
Opinion of the court by
— Affirming.
The appellant, Victor Reiser, an infant, instituted this action by William Reiser, his next friend, agajinst the appellee, the Southern Planing Mill & Lumber Company, to recover damages for the loss of three fingers from his left hand. He alleged in his petition “that whilst he was running a board over the knives of a joiner in defendant’s planing mill his left hand came in contact with the knives of said joiner, and three fingers of his left hand were cut off; that the accident was due to the fact that the knives were
The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the defendant, and we are asked to reverse the case because of the failure of the trial court to give the instruction offered by the plaintiff; and the contention is made that, when an employe has notified a master that a machine, upon which he is employed is not in good condition, and objected to continuing work thereon, and is induced to do-so by a promise to repair the machine within a reasonable time, that for such time the employe assumes uo risk from its operation; that the master, in effect, during this interval, guaranties the employe against any and all injury resulting from the operation of such machine. This contention is based upon the principle of law which is very clearly defined in Sheem. & R. Neg., (5th Ed.), section 250, in these words: “There is no longer any doubt that, where a master has expressly promised! to repair a defect, the servant does not assume the risk of an injury caused thereby within such a period of time after the promise as would be reasonable to allow for its performance, or, indeed, within any period which would not preclude all reasonable expectation that the promise might be kept. . . . And the same principle applies to amase where the-master promises to the servant to discharge an incompetent fellow servant, but fails to do so, and the foreman is thereby injured,” — and which has been frequently approved and applied by this court. In the case of Breckinridge Co. v. Hicks, 94 Ky., 362 (15 R., 143) 22 S. W., 554, 42 Am.
In Brown v. Levy (108 Ky., 163) (21 R., 1724) (55 S. W., 1079) the plaintiff alleged “that he was injured by reason of the incompetency of a fellow servant, and that he had notified his employer that said fellow servant was incompetent and negligent, and they knew when they employed him that he was careless and negligent, and had promised that they would in a short time remove him, and employ a competent assistant.” That case came up on demurrer, and it was held, in substance, that the servant could not be held to assume the risk of an injury by the
Judgment affirmed.