Plaintiff and appellant was engaged exclusively in trucking goods in defendant’s warehouse. Defendant took plaintiff from this work, for which he was especially employed, and directed him to assist another of defendant’s employees in loading heavy switch rails into a box car standing in defendant’s yards. After plaintiff had been at this work for about thirty minutes, he found that it became too heavy for him, and he complained to the foreman, that he could not do the work, because it was too heavy for him. The foreman, however, gave no heed to his complaint, but had him go on, until, as he was lifting one of the heavier rails, he sprained his back, in consequence whereof
The conclusion of the learned trial judge was correct. “I think,” the court said, “there is no principle of law that makes the master the guarantor of the sufficiency of a man’s muscles, so that if a man is set to do work that is too hard for him to do, and in the attempt to do it he overtires himself or overuses his muscles voluntarily, he can recover.” The authorities fully sustain this position.
In Worlds v. Georgia,
Defendant has urged the principle that “a servant is not called upon to set up his own unaided judgment against that of his superiors ; and he may rely upon their advice and still more upon their orders, notwithstanding many misgivings of his own.” 1 Shear. S. & R., Neg. § 186. Erom this point of view the case is controlled by Manore v. Kilgore-Peteler Co.,
Affirmed.
