Scheben v. George Wiedemann Brewing Co.

170 S.W. 948, 161 Ky. 413, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 69
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 4, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 170 S.W. 948 (Scheben v. George Wiedemann Brewing Co.) 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
Scheben v. George Wiedemann Brewing Co., 170 S.W. 948, 161 Ky. 413, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 69 (Ky. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

[414]*414Opinion op the Court by

Judge Miller

— Affirming.

The appellant, Bernard Seheben, brought this action against the appellee company to recover damages for personal injuries received on December 7, 1912, while in the service of. that company. Por brevity, the appellant will be called the plaintiff, and the appellee will be called the defendant.

The plaintiff was working in the chips department of the brewing company, which was located on the first floor of the building. While so engaged with a number of other men in washing and soaking chips, he was sent by his superintendent, about 7 o’clock in the morning, to scrub the cement floor of what is known as the cellar on the second floor. The. petition alleged that the defendant had negligently permitted a quantity of ice to form upon said cellar floor, thereby rendering it unsafe and dangerous to walk upon; that at said time said cellar room was so dark and insufficiently lighted that plaintiff could not see or discover the ice; and that while he was in the act of’ walking upon the cellar floor in the discharge of his duty pursuant to the order of his boss, and engaged in scrubbing thé floor, he- slipped upon the ice and fell upon an iron rail, injuring himself.

An amended petition alleged that the ice rendered the floor unsafe and dangerous’ to work or walk upon.

The answer denied negligence, and alleged contributory negligence upon the part of the plaintiff, which was denied by the reply.

At 'the close of plaintiff’s testimony, the defendant moved the court to instruct the jury peremptorily to find a verdict for it; and after this motion had been argued-by counsel upon either side, and submitted, the court adjourned until the afternoon session. Upon reconvening in the afternoon, and after the judge had indicated that he would sustain the motion for a peremptory instruction, counsel for plaintiff offered to recall the plaintiff as a witness, for the purpose of having him more fully describe the appearance of the ice, its formation, its size, its thickness, the length of time it appeared to him to have been formed, and that it appeared to be old ice which had formed from twelve to twenty hours before the accident.

The objection of the. defendant to the re-opening of the case was sustained, the trial judge saying that counsel for plaintiff did not indicate that the witness had any [415]*415knowledge as to the length of time the ice had been upon the floor, and that the plaintiff had been fully questioned, both upon the direct and on the cross-examination, as to the nature and extent of the ice. The judge further suggested that after the plaintiff had rested his case and the court had indicated its ruling, it was not proper to re-open the case. Thereupon the court peremptorily instructed the jury to find a verdict for the defendant, which was done; and from a judgment entered upon that verdict the plaintiff appeals.

The plaintiff was the only witness who testified concerning the accident, and the surrounding conditions at the time. The propriety of the peremptory instruction requires a review of the proof, which showed the following facts:

The plaintiff was 47 years of age, and had been working continuously in breweries for about 25 years. Most of this time he had worked in chip cellars, as a member of the same kind of a crew of men in which he was working when lie was injured. He had worked for the defendant at three different times; the first time in 1887, when he worked six or seven months; the second time for two years; and the last time for five and a half years. He ivas, therefore, familiar with the brewery of the defendant. He knew, for instance, that it had five rows of aging cellars; he was familiar with the aging cellar in which he was injured, and knew it contained 52 tanks or pits, seven or eight feet high and seven feet in diameter, and about the same size at the top as at the bottom; and that these pits each contained from 80 to 95 barrels of beer. He was familiar with the number of switches and electric lights in said cellar; with the thermometers therein; with the cold storage pipes, with frost on them; he knew that the room was kept cold by means of these pipes; that usually the windows at the opposite end of the side gangways, which lead from the main gang-way, were kept open when it was colder outside than it was inside, and closed when it was colder inside than it was outside.

The accident happened on a Saturday morning. On the Thursday before the accident, Sclieben and Suter, another member of the chips gang, had been in the cellar where the accident occurred spreading lime upon the floor, and part of the lime was still upon the floor when the plaintiff was injured. On Friday, the day before the accident, the plaintiff was sent to the chips cellar on the third floor to assist in breaking ice off the pipes in that [416]*416cellar. He had done this several times in the five years he had last worked there. The day of the accident was the first cold day of that winter. Scheben had cleaned this cellar floor twice before, and in going to the big cask cellar he had passed through the long gang-way of this aging céllar six or seven times a year, which enabled him to look down the small gang-way where he was hurt, at one end of which there was a window.

When directed by Brecht, the defendant’s boss, to go and scrub the floor of the aging room, Scheben obtained a candle in the room and picked up a hose which was lying near the steps, and attached it in the supply pipe. He then turned on the water and sprinkled the floor for four or five minutes, making it quite wet. When plaintiff slipped he held in his left hand a candle holder, in which there was a lighted candle, and in his right hand he held the hose so that the end of the hose was in front of him. The place where he fell was six feet from a sixteen candle power electric light, which was burning when he entered the cellar, and had so continued. The plaintiff says he did not know there was any ice on the floor until he felt with his hands to get up, and that he could then feel the floor and see the marks where his foot had slipped. He says it was real thin ice, not much thicker than a crust, and covered a space about a foot and a half long. The thermometer was standing at between 31 and 32 degrees Fahrenheit. Plaintiff concedes there was no evidence to show that defendant had actual knowledge of the icy condition of the cellar floor.

1. The trial court did not err in refusing to re-open the case after the argument upon the motion for a peremptory instruction. In support of his contention that the court should have re-opened the case, appellant relies upon Ballowe v. Hillman, 18 Ky. L. R., 677, which only holds that it is within the sound discretion of the court to permit the case to be re-opened for further testimony. The avowal shows, as above indicated, that plaintiff’s counsel purposed to recall the plaintiff on the question of the appearance of the ice, its formation, its size, its thickness and the length of time that it appeared to him to have been formed; and to show that it appeared to plaintiff to be old ice which had formed from twelve to twenty hours before the accident. But the plaintiff made no claim to any knowledge as to the length of time the ice had been upon the floor; he had no means of knowing that, and his avowal is not to the contrary.

[417]*417Furthermore, he had already told substantially all he knew about the ice, and the avowal showed nothing new.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 S.W. 948, 161 Ky. 413, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scheben-v-george-wiedemann-brewing-co-kyctapp-1914.