36 Ga. App. 227 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1926
Threlkeld brought .suit against Anthony to recover for personal injuries which he sustained when he fell from a scaffold on which he was standing while working as a carpenter on a building, the property of the. defendant. The plaintiff fell, because of the breaking of a plank in the scaffold on which he was standing. At the conclusion of the evidence’ on the trial of the case, the court directed a verdict in favor of the defendant, and to this ruling the plaintiff excepted. The defendant pleaded several defenses, one being that the house .was being erected by an independent contractor, one Rosser, for whom the plaintiff was working. Irrespective of whether, as to this defense or as to some others, the evidence may have presented issues for the jury, .we think that under the evidence the plaintiff, as a matter of law, could not recover, because it conclusively appears that he had equal means with his alleged master of knowing the defect or danger, if any, which caused his injury. The following facts are either as stated by the plaintiff or as shown by the undisputed evidence : ' The scaffold was built by the plaintiff’s fellow servant. Shortly afterward the plaintiff mounted it, and just as he was beginning work from his position upon it, the plank broke and he fell. The fellow servant who built the scaffold had told the plaintifE that it was “perfectly all right.” The plaintiff did not see anything wrong with the scaffold on which he was standing. None of the other scaffolds had broken with him. The plank which broke “looked to be a good two by four. You could not tell anything from the top of it, and there was not but about eight feet between the brackets.” Both Anthony, the owner, and
Judgment affirmed on main hill of exceptions; cross-hill dismissed.