138 Tenn. 408 | Tenn. | 1917
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Plaintiff in error was sued by the defendant in error in the circuit court of. Knox county, for an injury alleged to have been tortiously inflicted upon him, in the course of some work he was doing for the latter. The facts were these:
The defendant in error was an employee of the plaintiff in error, in its Coster yards at Knoxville, along with a large number of other persons. The laborers worked in pairs; defendant in error and one Foust were companions. They were engaged in dismantling cars. In the performance of this duty they were required to cut iron rods to enable them to separate the car into its constituent parts. They used two tools, a cleaver and a sledge hammer. The cleaver had a sharp edge or surface on one end, and on the other it had a hammer
“It was not customary for the handles to be wedged in the cleavers. They furnished them to us without being wedged on; I know that. All you had to do to tell that the handles were not wedged on was to look at them. Mr Hensley would sometimes do the driving and I would hold the cleaver, and I would sometimes do the driving and he would hold the cleaver. At the time Mr. Hensley got hurt, he didn’t do all the kinds of work I did; he was just learning, you know. I don’t remember just how. long he had been there. He had not been there long, though. There wasn’t anything complicated about any of the tools we worked with there; they were just simple tools; tools we would use every day in work of that kind.”
This witness further says, speaking of Hensley:
“He was'to work with me. He was called my ‘bud-die.’ I was to show him what to do about taking the cars down. He was my helper, or assistant. I was supposed to direct that work, what work was to be done by us.”
The plaintiff in error made a motion for peremptory instructions in the trial court, hut this was overruled. There were verdict and judgment for $425. The plaintiff in error appealed to the court of civil appeals, and, that court reversed the judgment and dismissed the action, holding that the motion for peremptory instructions should have been sustained. The case has reached us on the writ of certiorari. •
We are of the opinion that the court of civil appeals reached the correct conclusion. The cleaver was a simple tool. The fact that the handle was not wedged was apparent from a mere casual observation. So the defendant in error had as good an opportunity to judge of its condition as the plaintiff in error had. Under such circumstances there can he no recovery. Harry Sivley v. Nixon Mining & Drill Co., 128 Tenn., 675, 164 S. W., 772, 51 L. R. A. (N. S.), 337; Roofing & Manufacturing Co. v. Black, 129 Tenn., 30, 164 S. W, 1183.
It is insisted, however, that inasmuch as the tool was in the hands of defendant in error’s co-worker at the time the injury occurred, the rule does not apply. Under such circumstances the authorities also hold that it does not apply. Noble v. Bessemer Steamship Co., 127 Mich. 103, 86 N. W., 520, 54 L. R. A., 456, 89 Am. St. Rep., 461; Missouri, K. & T. R. Co. v. Quinlan, 77 Kan., 126, 93 Pac., 632; Campbell v. Gillespie, 69 N. J. Law, 279, 282, 55 Atl., 276; Pushcart v. New York Shipbuilding Co., 81 N. J. Law, 261, 81 Atl., 113; Williams
It is insisted in behalf of the defendant in error that Foust occupied the position of vice principal to him. This is not a correct view. He was only a leader-in the particular work, and such an one is. not a vice principal. Railroad v. Edwards, 111 Tenn., 31, 45, 46, 76 S. W., 897. In addition to this, at the time the injury
The result is the judgment of the court of civil appeals must he affirmed with costs.