6 Ga. App. 293 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1909
Russell was employed at tlie cottonseed-oil plant of the defendant corporation. His contention is that he was ordered by the person who filled the office of president or general superintendent to go-up a ladder to remedy certain troubles in an elevator chute attached to one of the seed conveyors. To get up to where the trouble existed it was necessary to go upon a ladder; the floor where it was necessary to place the ladder was very slick, and it was therefore necessary for another man to stand at the bottom and hold the ladder. The plaintiff informed the superintendent of this fact, and the superintendent ordered one Johnson to hold the ladder. After getting to the top of the ladder it was necessary for the plaintiff to step off from it to get upon the conveyor. The plaintiff found it necessary to take out from the side of the elevator-chute a small piece of plank that was used to prevent the kernels from slipping out of the chute. This plank had a ten-penny nail driven through it. While the plaintiff was in the act of removing this piece of plank, the superintendent called Johnson away from the ladder. The plaintiff, with the piece of plank under his arm, not knowing that Johnson had been called away, attempted to step backward upon the ladder. As he imposed his weight upon it, it slipped and he fell about three feet and caught upon a piece of shafting. As he caught upon the shafting, his arm, with the weight of his body suspended therefrom, came into contact with the nail in the plank, so that the nail was driven through the muscle of his-
Judgment reversed.