61 P. 314 | Kan. Ct. App. | 1900
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action was brought by Creasey, defendant" in error, to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by him while in the employ of
It was further alleged that after plaintiff and his companions had gone sixty feet into said building and were near room 15, Stewart returned to see why the water was not turned on, and carelessly and negligently directed plaintiff to remain and fight the fire, and shortly thereafter, water having been turned into the hose, plaintiff entered through the doorway from said alley into room 15, where the fire was burning, and turned a stream of water from the hose which he held onto the burning wood and grease, when there was a quick and loud explosion, and great sheets of flame and clouds of smoke were forced down, around and against plaintiff, and he was hurled a long distance from where he was standing and knocked insensible, and there remained, inhaling the overheated air and smoke and surrounded by the burning debris for
For answer to this petition, the defendant, after setting up a general denial, alleged that the injury to plaintiff, if any, was the result of Ms own carelessness and negligence directly contributing thereto,'which carelessness and negligence are more particularly and specifically stated as follows : (1) That plaintiff voluntarily left Ms place of safety and went into the place which he alleges was dangerous, and thereby exposed himself, and whatever damage he may have sustained, if any, was the result of such voluntary act on his part; (2) that plaintiff voluntarily assumed the danger, if any, which arose in going from a place of safety to assist in extinguishing the fire in defendant’s smoke-house ; (3) that whatever danger, if any, plaintiff was subjected to, was obvious and well known to Mm, and he voluntarily assumed the same; and (4) that plaintiff was injured, if injured at all, by the carelessness and negligence, if any, of a fellow servant. The plaintiff’s reply was a general denial.
A trial was had before the court and a jury, which resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $1000 and costs. Defendant’s motion for a new trial was overruled. The defendant, as plaintiff
First. That the court erred in overruling the demurrer to the evidence. The contention here is that the demurrer should have been sustained for the reasons that the petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action ; that the servant assumes whatever risk there may be in the performance of his duty, if he has knowledge of the danger incurred, or if the circumstances surrounding the service are such as to raise the presumption of knowledge; that .the injury, if. any, sustained was the result of the negligence of his fellow servant, Joss or Stewart; that the evidence fails to show a prima facie case upon which plaintiff could recover ; and that the judgment is wholly unsupported by the evidence.
The contention is that the petition does not charge a want of knowledge of the danger on the part of Creasey. He alleges
‘ ‘ that he was carelessly and negligently directed by Stewart to take the end of the hose and go into the building for the purpose of putting out the fire ; that in obedience to instructions, without knowledge of the danger thereby incurred, he entered the smoke-house.”
The defendant in the trial court interposed no objection to the petition, but filed its answer. The allegations of the petition in this regard are sufficient.
The servant assumes whatever ordinary risk there may be in the performance of his duty, if he has knowledge of the danger, or if the circumstances surrounding the service are such as to raise the presumption of knowledge. If a person accepts a given service, he assumes the ordinary risk of such dangers as he is acquainted with or as are obvious to him. In the case at bar, Creasey had never been in the smoke
Stewart was the foreman whose instructions Creasey was bound to obey, and Joss was foreman in another department. We do not think that either of these parties was the fellow servant of Creasey, in the ordinary acceptation of the term. It is the duty of the master not to expose an inexperienced servant, at whose hands he requires a dangerous service, to such danger without giving him. warning. The master must give him such instructions as will enable him to avoid injury, unless both the injury and the means of avoiding it are apparent. The master cannot exempt himself in this regard by delegating his power to another, and then call such party a fellow servant. We think both Joss and Stewart were vice-principals.
The testimony shows a prima facie cause of action, and the judgment is supported by sufficient evidence. The demurrer to the evidence was properly overruled.
Second. That the court erred in the admission of testimony. Complaint is made that the plaintiff was permitted to show that water when heated expands 1728 times its original volume. Is the effect resulting from water and fire- being brought together a matter of .common knowledge, or is it a matter of
Third. That the court erred in giving and in refusing instructions. The court properly instructed the jury as to the law applicable to the cause on trial; hence it follows that the instructions submitted by plaintiff in error were properly refused.
The judgment must be affirmed.