168 S.W.2d 348 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1943
Reversing.
Floyd Marshall obtained a judgment for $500 for an alleged injury to his left leg in August, 1940, which he claims he received while working for the appellants in handling short logs, referred to as stave cuts. The appellants *20 urge reversal on the followings grounds: (1) They were entitled to a peremptory instruction; (2) the court erred in admitting incompetent evidence; and (3) the court did not instruct the jury properly.
Floyd worked several days for the appellants. He was 18 years of age, some five feet ten inches in height, and weighed approximately 175 pounds at the time he said he was injured. He and a number of other employees of the appellants were engaged in the work of rolling stave cuts (short logs) some 38 inches in length to points where they could be dragged by mules to the stave mills. It seems that each employee worked separately. Though Floyd says that he was injured the latter part of the first week he worked for the appellants, he gave them no notice of the injury when he left their employment on the fourth day of the second week, saying only that he had a boil on his knee. It was two weeks after he quit work that he sent word that he had been hurt while rolling a stave cut. The appellants paid some $200 for doctor's bills and medical expenses for the treatment of an infected place on Floyd's leg.
The charges of negligence in the petition were that the appellants failed to furnish him with a safe place to work, and that a cant hook which was furnished him was dull and had a broken handle. The only proof of negligence related to the furnishing of a dull cant hook. Floyd said that the cant hook furnished him by an employee of the appellants had a dull point and that it would slip off of the logs sometimes. The appellants denied that they furnished Floyd, or any of their employees, with cant hooks, and offered proof in support of that position.
It is obvious from what has been said that Floyd was engaged in a very simple operation; namely, the rolling of log cuts some 38 inches in length. On direct examination he said that the cant hook which he was using was dull and would hardly stick into a log; that he was rolling a block from a hollow and that it got stuck and he took the cant hook to loosen it so it would roll; that he gave a jerk and the cant hook slipped and he fell in front of the cut; and that it struck his right leg and bruised and skinned it. On cross-examination he said that he was holding to a bush with his right hand and pulling at the stave cut with his left; that he was jerked from the tree when the cant hook came loose; that he was pulling on the cut with the view of turning it around so it would roll *21 down the hollow; that he fell down in front of it when it started rolling; and that it must have rolled over him. According to Floyd's own statements he placed himself in a dangerous position; namely, in front of the stave cut, or at least in a place where it would be apt to strike him when it started moving.
Were it not for the testimony as to the cant hook which Floyd said was furnished him, we would have no difficulty in disposing of the case on the motion of appellants for a directed verdict, even though they had elected not to operate under the Workmen's Compensation Act. Having made that choice, they were denied the common law defenses of contributory negligence, negligence of a fellow servant, and assumed risk. KRS
This brings us to Floyd's charge and proof as to the dull cant hook. It will not do to say that Floyd assumed the risk of using the dull cant hook which he said was furnished to him, even though it be conceded that a cant hook is a very simple tool, because the simple tool doctrine is based upon the doctrine of assumed risk. Reed v. Nelson Creek Coal Company,
It should be pointed out also that the jury should be instructed as to the limits for which an allowance could be made for loss of time. While the instruction on this point did set a maximum amount which could be found for loss of time, we believe it would have been better had the instruction on this point been framed as heretofore indicated.
The question of incompetent evidence relates to a statement made by one of Floyd's witnesses to the effect that Floyd told him that a stave cut had run over him and hurt his leg. This statement was self-serving, and should have been excluded. Cincinnati, N. O. T. P. Ry. Co. v. Ross,
It follows from what has been said that it is our view that the judgment should be and it is reversed, with directions to set it aside and for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Whole Court sitting. *23