141 Ky. 40 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1910
Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
The appellee, Fork, a man of mature years and ordinary intelligence was employed by appellant company to sliovel coal slack into a car and was told to gel- a shovel that had been nsed by others who-had done the same kind of work. When appellee picked up the shovel, he discovered that the-round wooden piece on the top of the handle was cracked in one or two places, so that the wood revolved on the iron rod that was run through it for the purpose of strengthening the handle. He then said to the foreman that he did not want to nse that shovel, and thereupon the foreman told him to go ahead and work with it, that others had been using it and he could do so and that be would get him another one. This was all that was said about the shovel. Soon after this, and on the same day, appellee’s thumb was pinched by the crack in the handle, causing a slight bruised place, but he continued to work during the day. On the next day, his hand became inflamed and blood poisoning set up, with the result that appellee lost considerable time and suffered no little. To recover damages for the injury sustained as he alleged by the defect in the shovel, he brought this action and on a trial was awarded damages in the sum of $275.
We have not considered the1 argument of counsel in reference to the promise to repair or furnish a better shovel, because the doctrine that protects the servant when he works under an assurance that the thing is safe or will be repaired, has no application to the facts of this case. American Tobacco Co. v. Adams, 137 Ky. 414.
Wherefore, the judgment is reversed, with directions to dismiss the petition.