Pennsylvania Co. v. Burgett

33 N.E. 914, 7 Ind. App. 338, 1893 Ind. App. LEXIS 257
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 31, 1893
DocketNo. 819
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 33 N.E. 914 (Pennsylvania Co. v. Burgett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pennsylvania Co. v. Burgett, 33 N.E. 914, 7 Ind. App. 338, 1893 Ind. App. LEXIS 257 (Ind. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinions

Davis, J.

In the court below, appellee recovered judgment in the sum of three thousand dollars, in an action for personal injuries.

The first error discussed is that the court erred in overruling appellant’s demurrer to the complaint.

After the formal parts of the complaint, averring the ownership and operation of the railroad and its appurtenant shops at Fort Wayne by appellant, and the employment of the appellee in said shops as a helper, and that the appellant was using in its shops a certain four-wheeled hand wagon loaded with a ton of iron, which the defendant was then and there hauling or driving near to where the appellee was carefully and diligently engaged in the discharge of the duties of his [340]*340employment, the complaint then avers that said wagon was then and there worn out, weak, loose, out of repair and wholly-unfit for the purposes for which it was being used by appellant, and that the king bolt of the wagon was loose, worn out, and the axles and wood around it were worn out and cut away from said king bolt, so that it could not hold the platform of said wagon steady or level; that the wheels, hubs, spokes, and joints of said wagon were all worn out, shrunken and so out of repair that said wagon became and was then and there dangerous and unfit to be so used, and when it was turned, or the surface over which it was so hauled would be uneven, it would swing from side to side and become likely to. upset; that the appellant knew, and, for a long time before the appellee became injured, it might have known, by the exercise of reasonable diligence, of all of said defects and unsafe condition of said wagon; and yet, that, with notice of said defects and the dangerous condition of said wagon, the appellant, on the 14th of March, 1887, carelessly, and without any regard for the safety of the life or limb of appellee or its other employes, hauled and was hauling and driving said wagon, so loaded with one ton of iron, past and near to the appellee, when said wagon, on account of its said worn out, weak and dangerous condition, as aforesaid, upset with said load of iron, and then and there and thereby said wagon and iron were thrown on the appellee, and broke his leg and otherwise injured him.

It is further averred that appellee did not know that the said wagon, so negligently driven and used near to appellee, as aforesaid, was out of repair, worn out, or in any way dangerous, or that the same would upset or fall upon him and throw said iron on him as aforesaid, but he avers that he was so injured without any fault whatever on his part.

[341]*341It is earnestly insisted by the learned counsel for appellant, in an able and ingenious argument, that the complaint, the substance of which we have hereinbefore set out, fails to show actionable negligence on the part of appellant, and also fails to show that appellee was without contributory negligence.

We have carefully read the complaint, in the light of the objections urged thereto, and are of the opinion that the facts alleged in the 1 complaint constitute actionable negligence.

The absence of an averment that the servants of appellant who were using, the wagon were not the coemployes of appellee does not sustain appellant’s contention. If, on the contrary, it appeared that they were coemployes, we are not prepared to say, under the circumstances stated in the complaint, that such fact would render the complaint bad. The general rule is that where a servant receives an injury occasioned, in part, by the negligence of the master and in part by the negligence of a coemploye, the servant, if without fault on his part, may maintain an action against the master for such injury. Boyce v. Fitzpatrick, 80 Ind. 526; Paulmier v. Erie R. R. Co., 34 N. J. L. 151; 2 Thompson on Reg., 981.

In view of the averments in the complaint, it was not necessary, in order to show that appellee was not guilty of contributory negligence, to state that he could not have known of the unsafe condition of said wagon, had he exercised care in observing what was about him.

It sufficiently appears, from the facts pleaded, that appellant was guilty of actionable negligence; that such negligence was the proximate cause of the injury, and the general allegation that appellee was without fault is not overthrown by the statement of any facts from which it is apparent he was guilty of negligence.

[342]*342The only other error discussed is that the court erred in overruling appellant’s motion for a new trial.

It is urged that the evidence fails to show negligence on the part of appellant, and affirmatively shows that whatever negligence there may have been was the negligence of appellee himself and his coemployes.

There are nearly four hundred pages of type-written testimony, and we take occasion here to state that the record is, in all respects, properly made, logically arranged, conveniently bound, thoroughly indexed and in excellent shape for examination. If the profession would, in all cases, see that the records were so well and conveniently constructed, the labor of the court would be facilitated.

We can not, within the limits of this opinion, undertake to set out all the evidence, or the substance thereof. The reading of the record discloses there is evidence tending to prove, among other things, that, at the time of the accident, the appellee was in the pursuit of his duties, following his wagon where, under the circumstances, helpers were accustomed to go, and where it was his duty to go; that in the shop where appellee was so employed, the appellant had certain shears used by its servants for the cutting of rods and plates of iron, to which shears the iron was transported from the streets through the shops, and from the shears to the forges; that the shears set a short distance north of a large door in the south side of the shop, through which these loads of material, on trucks or hand wagons, passsd to the shears and out again; that the appellee’s duty was to aid in transporting this iron, and, at the time he was injured, Grotham, the blacksmith he was helping, and appellee had hauled a load of iron to the shears and had it cut up and dropped on the opposite or west side of the shears, and that Grotham had taken hold of the tongue of his wagon and [343]*343turned it around and was proceeding back again towards the door to go out of the shop; that the appellee’s duties required him to assist in propelling the wagon when loaded, and to follow it out as it was taken away; that the employe, Dryer, who operated the shears, as soon as Grotham’s load was cut up, proceeded to transport a wagon loaded with iron, containing about seven hundred pounds of rods, through said door to the shears, and had proceeded to about opposite the shears and then turned his wagon sharply to the left, bringing the front end of it directly towards the west, while the back end of it was swung around from south to east; that these rods extended over the back end of said truck some six to eight feet, and, as the back ends of the rods swung around, they were brought between Grotham’s truck, as it was passing southward, and the appellee standing close upon it, and thus prevented him from following his truck to the door.

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Bluebook (online)
33 N.E. 914, 7 Ind. App. 338, 1893 Ind. App. LEXIS 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennsylvania-co-v-burgett-indctapp-1893.