Burton Construction Co. v. Metcalfe

172 S.W. 698, 162 Ky. 366, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 85
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 27, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 172 S.W. 698 (Burton Construction Co. v. Metcalfe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burton Construction Co. v. Metcalfe, 172 S.W. 698, 162 Ky. 366, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 85 (Ky. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Hurt

Reversing.

On tbe 15th. day of July, 1912, John Metcalfe and a number of other persons, as employes of the Burton Construction Company, were engaged in knapping rock. This we understand to he the process of reducing rocks into very small pieces by the use of a small hammer upon them. The appellee and those associated with him performed this labor upon a flat piece of ground at the mouth of a hollow, at the foot of a hill. While engaged [367]*367in this work it was necessary for the appellee and his associates to sit down upon the ground, or upon some very low object, so as to bring them in such proximity to the rocks as to be able to break them into small pieces. The rocks, in large pieces, were hauled by other employes and laid upon the hill side, from nine to twelve feet from the base of the hill, where the men were engaged in the knapping process. On the day stated above, and previous thereto, the appellee and those engaged in the work with him, when they needed material to work upon, would go up to the rock pile upon the hill above them and bring down the rock in their arms to the knapping ground. John Wilkerson was the foreman for the appellant, and was present, directing the work, and had control and charge of the appellee and those associated with him in relation to the work in hand. He directed Jesse Tipton, another employee of the appellant, to take a large sledge hammer, which weighed, according to the proof, about eighteen pounds, and to break up the rock which was on the hill side, just above the men engaged in knapping the rock, and then to carry or hand down the rock to them upon the knapping yard. The evidence for appellee tends to show, and, in fact; he himself testified, that he was sitting with his back to the hill, engaged in his work of knapping rock, and that he did not know that Jesse Tipton was breaking-the rock with the sledge hammer on the hillside just above him, and there was other proof conducing to show that the noise made by the hammers used by those engaged in the knapping on the knapping yard prevented the appellee from becoming aware of the operations of Tipton. Appellee says that no one gave him any notice- or warning as to what Tipton was doing, and the first, he knew of it a piece of rock, weighing about twelve pounds, came down the hill with great force, and struck him upon the back, near the spinal cord and kidneys, and injured him very seriously; that when said rock struck’ him just above the hips, and near the spinal column, he looked around and seeing Tipton, called to him, • “What do you mean, you will kill some one;” that he then began to get sick, and arose, with the assistance of the hammer, to his knees, when he asked the other em-' ployes to assist him, and they helped him to the shade, and, securing a broad plank, put him upon it and carried him to the house of David Powell, and then, se[368]*368curing a buggy, be was taken to another bouse, where be remained abed for twenty-one days. The proof further shows that on the day and night on which he was injured blood passed with his urine, and that after three weeks he was able to go home. He was confined in his. own house for forty-six days, and had not been able to do any labor from that time until the time of the trial, which took place on the 13th day of December thereafter, A physician, who testified upon the trial, stated that he had on that day examined appellee, and that he found a condition of atrophy existing, and a wasting of the muscle of the back, and, in his opinion, the injury was permanent.

The appellee, in his petition, claimed that the appellant had not used ordinary care to furnish him a safe place in which to work, or to keep it safe while he was engaged in the work, and that appellant, by its agent and foreman, John Wilkerson, was grossly negligent of his safety when he caused Tipton to break the rock on the hill above him in the manner in which he did, and that this negligence was the direct and proximate cause of his injury; that Tipton was performing the work of breaking up the rock by the immediate command and in the presence of Wilkerson, who could, by the exercise of ordinary care, have seen the danger in which ap-pellee was situated from the liability of the stones rolling or being knocked down the hill against him, and knowing of the said, danger, had directed Tipton to break the rock at that place, and in that manner, and gave him, appellee, no warning of the danger, and asked that he be allowed damages in the sum of $2,500.00 against appellant.

The defendant, by its answer, traversed all of the allegations of negligence alleged against it, and, in addition, pleaded that the appellee was negligent himself to such a degree that otherwise the injury would not have happened, by sitting with his back to the hill, where he knew the rocks were being broken up in the manner stated, and, in another paragraph, alleged that the injury incurred by appellee was one of the assumed risks incidental to his employment. The allegations in regard to contributory negligence and assumed risk were ■controverted by reply. The trial resulted in a verdict ■of the jury awarding to appellee damages in the sum of ;$800.00. Appellant having filed grounds for a new trial, ¡and same being overruled, he appeals to this court.

[369]*369The appellant, by its counsel, insists that the judgment ought to be reversed and a new trial granted for three reasons, the first of which is: That the injury complained of by appellee was caused by the act of a fellow-servant of appellee and that appellant is not responsible therefor; second, that the court erred in the instructions given to the jury; and, third, that the court erred in refusing to give instructions asked for by appellant; and we will take up the discussion of these grounds in their order.

The appellant insists very earnestly that Jesse Tip-ton was a fellow-servant of the appellee, and that the injury to appellee was solely from the act of Tipton, and for that reason there could be no recovery against the appellant. Upon the other hand, the appellee insists that Tipton was not his fellow-servant, and for that reason his injury resulted from a negligent act of another employee of appellant in another field of labor, and that appellaht was responsible therefor. We do not think there can be any serious controversy as to the fact that Tipton was a fellow-servant of the appellee. Tipton was engaged in the same kind of labor, except as to the fineness with which he was required to break the rock; he was working at substantially the same place, and substantially performing the same duty of appellee, and was of the same class with appellee, being a common laborer under the authority of the foreman, Wilkerson. The foreman, Wilkerson, being immediately present, and directing the methods by which the rock should be broken, and having directed Tipton to engage in breaking up the rock with the sledge at the place where he did so, and having directed him as to the manner with which he was to break them, and Tipton having followed the orders and directions of the foreman upon that subject, we are of the opinion that the master was responsible for the injurious effects of the act commanded by Wilkerson, which resulted in the injury to appellee, provided appellee was then exercising ordinary care for his own safety. It was the duty of Tipton to obey the order of Wilkerson, and there is no controversy but what he received the command from Wilkerson to break the rock at the place and in the manner in which he did.

In the case of L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Crady (73 S. W., 1126) this court said:

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Bluebook (online)
172 S.W. 698, 162 Ky. 366, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burton-construction-co-v-metcalfe-kyctapp-1915.