18 Ga. App. 117 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1916
Dan Williams brought suit against the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company, alleging in his petition that the defendant owned and operated certain repair shops; at which it maintained what is known as a “drop pit,” across which the tracks of the company extended, so that when it became necessary to repair from underneath any locomotive or ear, the same could be moved upon the track extending across the drop pit, and the employees of the defendant, by working in the drop pit, could make the needed repairs; that the plaintiff was employed by the defendant company as a “machinist’s helper,” and his duties required that he should work on locomotives as they came into the shop, and on October 6, 1914, he was, in conjunction with other employees of the defendant company, working on a locomotive, under the direction of a foreman of the defendant, then and there in charge of the work; that a locomotive was placed in position on a track spanning the drop pit, and the plaintiff, acting under the direction of the said foreman, “had removed what is known as a binder and a wedge, and had tried to knock from the said locomotive another appliance underneath said engine, known as the ‘shoe,’ but the said shoe stuck, and could not be taken out of place;” that “it then became petitioner’s duty, acting under the direction of Mr. Winn [the said foreman], to place what is known as the air-jack under the driving-wheel axle of said locomotive, and, by means of a lever and compressed air, the piston of said aiT-jaek would rise upward, catch underneath the said axle, and raise the
Since, in our opinion, the court did not err in sustaining the general demurrer, it is unnecessary to consider in detail the special grounds referred to above. Unquestionably so much of the amendment to the petition as alleged negligence on the part of the defendant because the appliance upon which the plaintiff was required to work was unsafe and the place where his work was to be done was dangerous is without merit, since the allegations in the petition disclose that the plaintiff was a “machinist’s helper,” presumably familiar with his duties as such, as well as with the particular work he was called upon to perform at the time he was injured, and also familiar with the nature and character of the place where he was required to work. “Where a master employs a servant to repair defective machinery, the rule as to furnishing reasonably safe machinery does not apply to the machine to be repaired. Green v. Babcock Lumber Co., 130 Ga. 469 [60 S. E. 1062].” Holland v. Durham Coal Co., 131 Ga. 715, 720
A servant is bound to exercise skill and diligence, and takes upon himself the burden of establishing negligence on the part of the master and due care on his own part, where he seeks a recovery for injuries of this character. “Bo recovery can be had upon mere proof of negligence on the part of the master; but the plaintiff must show, in addition to the exercise of due care on his own part, that he was not aware of the danger, that his opportunities for knowing the existence of the danger were not equal to those of the master, and that in the exercise of ordinary care he could not himself have known of the danger. Civil Code, § 3131; W. & A. R. Co. v. Bishop, 50 Ga. 465; Brush Electric Light & Power Co. v. Wells, 103 Ga. 512, 515 (30 S. E. 533); McDaniel v. Acme Brewing Co., 113 Ga. 80 (38 S. E. 404); McDonnell v. Central Railway Co., 118 Ga. 86, 89 (44 S. E. 840).” Kilgo v. Borne Soil Pipe Manufacturing Co., 16 Ga. App. 737 (86 S. E. 82). The servant assumes the ordinary risks of his employment, and, to authorize a recovery for injuries incurred in connection therewith, it must appear, as stated in the quotation from the Kilgo case, supra, that he did not know and had not equal means with the master of knowing the existence of the defects or dangers and by the exercise of ordinary care could not have known thereof. Civil Code, §§ 2611, 2612. See also Baxley v. Satilla Manufacturing Co., 114 Ga. 720, 723 (40 S. E. 730). Bor is it necessary for the master to give warning of a danger that is obvious. Crown Cotton Mills v. McNally, 123 Ga. 35 (51 S. E. 13).
The main theory upon which the plaintiff based his right to recover was that the master, through the foreman, had expressly instructed him to undertake the work of repair in a position where Ms safety would be endangered by the falling of the metal “shoe”
Erom the allegations in the petition it is clear that the plaintiff was thoroughly acquainted with the place where he was required to work; his duty was to repair defective, unsafe, and dangerous machinery, and he was at the time of the injury in the very place provided for that particular work. As he stood in the drop pit’ for the purpose of repairing the locomotive, he had entire knowledge of the existence and location of the wedge and shoe, and of whatever danger could be apprehended therefrom, since the peti
Any extensive knowledge of the laws of physics can not, of course, be expected of ordinary laborers, but the existence of those primal forces which govern the universe and control all matter, and which come necessarily under the observation of every man, whether learned or unlearned, master or servant, during the entire term of his natural existence, must be held to be within his knowledge at all times and places and under all conditions. Certainly the servant in this case had equal means with the master of knowing, and understood as thoroughly as did the foreman, representing the master and directing the laborers, that the attraction of gravity would draw forcibly to the earth a heavy piece, of iron, when every existing support sustaining it aloft was removed. Hor can it be said that the master was .any better aware of this fact than the servant. To the contrary, the servant, by reason of his location at the time of the injury (if it could by any chance be said that one knew better than the other what the probable result would be from the uncontrolled operation of the law of gravity) knew better than the master the dangers incident to the situation.
Among all the great forces of nature, perhaps the dawning intelligence first makes acquaintance with gravity, for even the infant, before he is able to toddle along unaided, discovers that an object released from his feeble grasp will fall, and may produce pain if dropped upon his tender foot or hand, and during all the years which lie between infancy and old age the influence of this universal power is daily witnessed by every reasoning person, and to some extent is often apparently noted and guarded against by
We think the trial judge did not err in sustaining the general demurrer and dismissing the petition. Judgment affirmed.