Smith v. Beasley

92 Kan. 390 | Kan. | 1914

Per Curiam:

The plaintiff was in the employ of defendants, who were engaged in repairing a roof on a two-story building. He had worked for them on two other buildings and had been at work on this roof about two days prior to his injury. He was past eighteen years of age, a young man of more than average intelligence. His duties required him to take a roll of paper, which he held with a stick through the center of the roll, and to walk backwards from a point about midway of the roof to the east end. Another employee held the other end of the paper, walking backwards in the opposite direction, and the paper was thus unrolled. At the east end of the roof there was a fire wall eighteen inches high. The plaintiff knew the fire wall was there; that it was twenty-five or thirty feet to the alley below, and that there was nothing to prevent his falling over this eighteen-inch wall if he became overbalanced. He walked backwards with the roll of paper without look*391ing to see how near he was to the edge of the roof, and continued walking until he struck the fire wall, fell over it to the ground, and was injured. The danger was open to common observation and was as fully known to him as it was to the defendants. His own evidence showed that he was fully capable of knowing and measuring the risk of his employment, and that his injury was caused solely by his failure to take ordinary care to protect himself from an obvious and apparent danger. No negligence was shown on the part of the defendants. All that the court could do was to sustain the demurrer.

The judgment is affirmed.