179 Ky. 577 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1918
Opinion of ti-ie Court by
Affirming.
In this action brought in tlie Perry circuit court the appellant, Toney Williams, sought to recover of the appellee, Kentucky Eiver Power Company, damages for injuries sustained to his person, caused, as alleged in the petition, by the gross negligence of appellee’s foreman; such negligence consisting, as further alleged, of the misconduct of the latter in requiring him to remove from a car and carry a distance of 65 or 75 feet green . lumber too heavy for a single person to handle and the weight of which produced his injuries, known as double “inguinal hernia.”
The answer of the appellee denied the negligence charged in the petition and alleged contributory negligence and assumption of risk on the part of appellant. The latter pleas were controverted of record, and upon the issues thus formed the case went to trial, resulting in a verdict for the appellee, returned by the jury in obedience to a peremptory instruction given by .the
It appears from the appellant’s evidence that he and two other employees of the appellee were directed by its foreman, Yonkers, to remove from a car standing on a side track of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad, at Grlomarr, the lumber in question, which consisted of boards or plank of green pine running in length from eight to sixteen feet, having a width of from eight to twelve inches apd a thickness of from one to two indies. In removing the lumber from the car one of the employees stood in the car and passed it through the door, when it was taken in hand by appellant and the other employee, each carrying a plank at a time a distance of 65 or 75 feet and laying it in a pile.
The other two employees of the appellee assisting in the removal of the hunber were not introduced in appellant’s behalf, and he alone testified as to the manner in which the lumber was unloaded and what occurred during the performance of' that work. It appears from his testimony, however, that Yonkers, the foreman, was present when the unloading of the car began and much of the time until the work of unloading was completed. So we must look to appellant’s testimony alone to ascertain what negligence, if any, the foreman was guilty of. The following excerpts from his testimony furnish the only evidence relied on to establish the negligence complained of:
“Q. How much lumber did you unload? A. A box car load of lumber; there was three of us, one inside threw it off and two, we moved it and placed it side by side. Q. Who was your boss? A. Mr. Yonkers, Sam Yongers. Q. Was he present? A. Yes, he was showing us what to do and telling us what to do. He told us where to place it and he went himself first. I told him it was a little too heavy. He says, ‘Well, I will take it up,’ and he took one. Q. What did you say to him? A. I said it was a little too heavy. Both of us we told him that,.I and Bradley, and he says, ‘I will pick it up,’ and he took one and then we walked along and took one each, each time, just the way they come, heavy or whatever it was, —Light. ’ ’
Wo quite agree with the conclusion reached by the trial court. Appellant’s evidence fails to show any culpable negligence on the part of appellee’s foreman, Yonkers, but does show such a state of case as authorizes the application of the doctrine of assumed risk. In other words, it is patent from the evidence that the injuries sustained by appellant resulted from no fault or negligence on the part of the foreman, but from a cause or causes purely incidental to the risk he assumed in undertaking and continuing the work of unloading the car. The assumption of risk is a rule of the common law which is based on contract and, by implication, on the servant’s act in voluntarily exposing himself to danger. In this case, according to the evidence, there was no de-
In Sandy Valley & Elkhorn Ry. Co. v. Tackett, 167 Ky. 756, in which the plaintiff claimed to have been injured while operating a lifting jack, and that his injuries were due to the negligence of the defendant in ordering him to operate the jack alone and in failing to furnish a sufficient force to operate it, we held that in view of the rule that a servant is the best judge of his own strength and that the duty is on him not to overtax it, the fact that he was injured by overtaxing it in attempting to operate the jack by means of a lever, imposed no liability upon the defendant for such injuries, as he as
In Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company v. Williams, By, &c., 165 Ky. 386, the plaintiff while performing night work with a fellow servant for the master in loading cinders from a cinder pit on cars, was overcome by the heat of the weather and thereby injured; and the evidence showing that the place of work, appliances for performing it, and the manner of its performance, were reasonably safe, and that the work was such as had always been done by two men, the defendant was held not liable in damages for the injuries sustained by the plaintiff. In the opinion we, in part, said:
“If the unusually hot weather prevailing the night appellee was injured added a risk • or danger he had not previously encountered in the performance of his work, the danger was admittedly known to him, as he experienced the heat before he was overcome by it,. . . . The master is under no duty to prevent his servant from becoming overheated at his work, resulting from atmospheric or weather conditions, as they are matters beyond his control. In such case, while the servant may not certainly know how to keep himself within the limits of safety, he is better able to judge than anyone else how much heat he can safely stand, how it affects him, and when his endurance reaches a point beyond which he ought not, for his own safety, to continue the work. For these reasons it is for him and not the master to determine whether he shall engage in the work at all; or, if so, how energetically, and when he should rest or quit. If this were not true an employer could never afford to employ a laborer to do work at which there was any probability of his becoming overheated; and it is not to be' overlooked that in operating furnaces, engines, and other heat producing machines or appliances there is always more or less danger to the operative of becoming overheated, and the same is likewise true of farming and other occupations which compel the laborer to be exposed to the heat of the sun. ’ ’
So in the case before us it may properly be said that no one was better able than appellant to judge, in unloading the lumber, to what extent he could exert his strength without injury to himself, or when his power
As in our opinion the appellant’s injuries were not caused by the negligence of appellee’s foreman, but resulted solely from an ordinary risk of danger incidental to the sendee in wbicb be was employed, and wbicb be assumed in accepting such employment, it follows that the giving of the peremptory instruction by the trial court, as asked by the appellee, was not error.
Wherefore, the judgment is affirmed.