162 F. 306 | 3rd Cir. | 1908
This was an action to recover for personal injury sustained by the plaintiff below, the defendant here, which he alleged was caused by negligence of the defeudan- below . the plaintiff here. There is no complaint of any action of tiie court during the trial, or of its charge to the jury. The sole question is whether a verdict for the defendant should not have been directed, or a judgment non obstante veredicto have been entered in its favor, and the facts involved in that question are not controverted.
The plaintiff was employed by the defendant. He was not a painter by trade, but he was set to painting the outside of the roof of the defendant’s iron mill at Coatesville, Pa. Tie was engaged at this work for three days, and then was told to do some painting inside of the building. He had not been in the building before, and was in it but a very short time when the accident in question occurred. It was a very large building. There was some exhaust steam in it, and it contained heavy machinery which was in noisy operation. The plaintiff began painting its sides, which were of corrugated iron, at a point about 20 feet above the ground. He stood, as directed by the foreman, with one foot on an angle iron and with the other foot on the lower flange of a horizontal steel I-beam. His feet were about 18 inches apart, and when he was painting below the level at which he was standing he reached down between Iiis feet. The I-beam referred to was about 3 feet high, and on its top was one of the rails of a track upon which traveled an electrically operated crane. This crane spanned the mill, and was supported on the other side by a similar rail about 73 feet distant from the rail first mentioned. It traversed the entire building, which was about 300 feet in length. The plaintiff had been given no information or instruction respecting it. It was at a point quite distant from him when he began to work inside of the building, and it was started on its first trip of that day without notice to him. He, as has been stated, painted below as well as above the level at which he was standing; and while he was thus painting and in a “squatting attitude” the crane ran over his left arm, which, but a moment before, he had thrown over the rail to support himself.
If all inferences that could justifiably be drawn from the evidence would not suffice to support a verdict for the plaintiff, a verdict for the defendant should have been directed. Randall v. Baltimore & Ohio R. R. Co., 109 U. S. 482, 3 Sup. Ct. 322, 27 L. Ed. 1003. Of this we have no doubt; but as from the unquestioned facts reasonable men might have reached different conclusions respecting both negligence of the defendant and contributory negligence of the plaintiff, the learned judge was right in submitting both questions to the jury, and in subsequently entering judgment in accordance with the verdict.
Therefore that judgment is affirmed.