133 Ark. 206 | Ark. | 1918
Appellee was the plaintiff below and recovered judgment to compensate an injury sustained by him while employed by the appellant zinc mining company. He had been engaged in removing certain timbers underneath a tramway, over which cars of ore were being pushed and propelled, but on the morning of this injury he was directed to build a tipple at the end of a certain tramway which was not then in use. He failed to find the necessary material to build the tipple and he reported that fact to his foreman, who directed him to tear up a discarded tipple which was lying near the tramway then in use, and use the material thus secured in building the tipple. The place in which he was working was about eight or ten feet south of the boulder room into which the material from the mine was dumped, and about six feet east of the tramway. This tramway ran north and south and connected the tunnel in which the mining was being done at the 'south terminus with the tipple over the boulder room at the north terminus. The tipple was a pen-shaped structure built of heavy, two by four timbers, spiked together to such a height that the top of the end next to the tramway was on the level with the top of the cars and formed a bumper for the cars to strike against in the process of dumping. The ore was carried on the cars in a large two hundred pound metal can, and iron bars were placed in the pen in such position as to keep .the can from falling through when dumped into it from the cars. The track to the tipple was so laid that the loaded cars ran to it by g’ravity, but upon returning to the mine, the car upon which the can sat was pushed by an employee. Cleats were nailed to the car in such a way as to hold the can at an angle which caused it to dump properly. The top of the car was flat and the can was about thirty-two inches in diameter and thirty-six inches high. The loaded car propelled by gravity would strike the bumper at the tipple with sufficient force to throw the can forward off the car into the pen where its contents were emptied and this operation made it dangerous for one to remain in close proximity to this room while the ore was falling from the can. Accordingly, when a car was released at the south end of the trestle the person releasing the car would cry out a warning, whereupon persons near the boulder room would retire some distance therefrom. As soon as the can had dumped, the employee in charge thereof would follow down to the tipple and those near the boulder room would return to their work. If any material remained in the can or any other danger arose therefrom, the employee in charge thereof, knowing that it was customary, for those beneath to return to work, would cry out a warning to those persons to return to a place of safety and would beat upon the can to dislodge its contents and would then seize the can by the top and pull it up and back from the top of the car and it would fall into its place thereon.
A can had just been dumped in this manner when appellee and others returned to the place of their employment and resumed their labors, when Yickers, an employee of the appellant company, who was operating one of these cars, in his effort to load one of the cans out of the tipple on the car, lost control of the can and it was hurled down off of the trestle upon appellee and injured him severely.
As a basis of the right of recovery, it is insisted that while appellee was performing the duties of his employment, with due care on his own part, he sustained an injury which did not result from any danger incident to the employment, but one which arose from the negligence of an employee in failing to properly operate the car or to give the customary warning which would have enabled appellee to retire to a place of safety. The appellant company denied liability and plead as a defense, assumption of risk and contributory negligence. These were the controlling issues in the case, although the instructions given at the request of both parties covered a wider range. The jury returned a verdict for a .substantial sum and this appeal has been prosecuted to reverse the judgment pronounced thereon.
Appellant says that there are only two possible theories under which the judgment can be sustained. One was its failure to exercise reasonable care to furnish a safe place for appellee to work. The other is that the injury resulted from the negligence of a fellow servant. Instructions were given on both these questions, yet, under the facts of this case, these questions become the same, and, as appellant says in its brief, the question of furnishing a safe place in which to work is not really one of the issues in the case, for if the testimony supports the verdict at all, it is because the plaintiff’s injury resulted from the negligence of Vickers in carelessly handling the can.
Counsel for the respective parties argue the applicability of the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur. But we need not now determine whether it applies under the testimony in this case, because the instructions given made no application of that doctrine. Counsel for appellant say, however, that unless the doctrine does apply, and is applied to the facts of this case, that the evidence does not support the verdict. We do not agree with counsel in this contention. It is one thing to say that a presumption of negligence arises from the proof of the injury, but it is a different matter to say that the jury may not, in its consideration of the facts of the case, reach the conclusion, or draw the inference; that the injury was occasioned by some happening which was not one of the ordinary risks of the employment, and to conclude further that some negligent act of omission or commission caused this injury.
Appellant also insists that' the injury here resulted from one of the ordinary risks of the employment, and that appellee must therefore be held to have assumed the risk thereof as an incident to the employment. Counsel base on these predicates an erroneous argument that the verdict should have been directed in .appellant’s favor.
It is insisted also, that appellee was guilty of contributory negligence. The jury might have found, however, that inasmuch a's the contents of the can had been discharged, that appellee was not guilty of negligence in returning to his work, as it was shown that this was the practice of experienced miners. But the finding that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence would only have reduced the amount of the recovery proportionately, and the jury was properly so charged. We conclude therefore that the testimony supports the verdict.
In an instruction, numbered two, the jury was told that it was appellant’’s duty to use ordinary care in furnishing appellee with a reasonably safe place in which to work and to use ordinary care and prudence to prevent injury to Mm while engaged in such work, and that a failure to discharge this duty would constitute negligence on the part of appellant and would permit appellee to recover by reason of any injuries resulting therefrom. It is argued that this instruction is erroneous as excluding the doctrine of assumption of risk, and so it would be if it stood alone and was not to be read in connection with the other instructions. The court told the jury, however, that the instructions were to be read and considered as a whole and an instruction, numbered three which dealt with the question of assumption of risk, immediately followed the instruction numbered two and is separated from it only by the numeral “3.” These instructions appear in juxtaposition and are to be read,, therefore, as if they were paragraphs of the same instruction. St. L., I. M. & S. Ry. Co. v. Rogers, 93 Ark. 564; The Citizens Bank v. Fairweather, 127 Ark. 67.
Appellee requested the court to give instruction numbered 8, which reads as follows:
“While it is true the plaintiff assumed all the risks that were ordinarily and usually incident to the service in which he was engaged, yet he did not assume the risk of any negligence on the part of the defendant or its employees. In the absence of knowledge on his part, the plaintiff had the right to presume that the defendant had performed the duties that devolved upon him. One of the duties imposed upon the defendant by law was to exercise ordinary care to provide the plaintiff a reasonably safe place in which to work. An employer is bound to exercise ordinary care in furnishing a safe place to his servant to work, whether it is of a simple character, or whether it is dangerously situated. (Therefore, if you find from the evidence that the plaintiff’s injury was caused by reason of an unsafe place furnished to said plaintiff by the defendant, in which to work, and that plaintiff did not know of its unsafe condition prior to the time of the alleged happening of the injury, your verdict will be for the plaintiff”).
The instruction, numbered ten, given at the request of appellee, dealt with the question of warning and told the jury that if the custom obtained of giving warning and none was given, that appellee would not be guilty of contributory negligence, “unless the jury, by the preponderance of the testimony on the part of the defendant, finds that he failed to use such care and vigilance in discovering his peril and avoiding his injury as was consistent with the performance of the work in which he was engaged.” It is now urged'that this instruction was erroneous in limiting the consideration of the jury to the testimony of the defendant in determining whether appellee 'had been guilty of contributory negligence. But only a general objection was made to the instruction, which was a lengthy one. A specific objection to this instruction would, no doubt, have led to a correction of the instruction which would have permitted a consideration of all the testimony in the case in determining whether appellee was guilty of contributory negligence, and, in the absence of this specific objection, we must hold that the error -was not prejudicial. Little Rock Railway, etc., Co. v. Doyle, 79 Ark. 378.
An instruction, numbered 4, requested by appellant, was properly refused because it was predicated upon the assumption of an equal knowledge of danger on the part of both appellant ánd appellee. There is no testimony to show that appellee knew or could have known that Vickers would be guilty of a negligent act in handling the can, for this was the cause of the injury.
An instruction, numbered 9, requested by appellant, told the jury that if appellee resumed 'his work in disregard of a warning which would have saved him from injury had it been heeded, that he assumed the risk of the injury against which the warning was given. This instruction was properly refused, because the undisputed evidence is that appellee obeyed the warning given, that is that a can of ore was on its way to the tipple, and, further, that the injury was not occasioned by the danger of which the warning was given.
Other questions are discussed but they are disposed of by what we have already said. Finding no prejudicial error, the judgment is affirmed.