Western & Atlantic Railroad v. Edwards

148 S.E. 628, 40 Ga. App. 66, 1929 Ga. App. LEXIS 18
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 17, 1929
Docket19480
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 148 S.E. 628 (Western & Atlantic Railroad v. Edwards) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Western & Atlantic Railroad v. Edwards, 148 S.E. 628, 40 Ga. App. 66, 1929 Ga. App. LEXIS 18 (Ga. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Bell, J.

Thomas Edwards brought suit against Western & [67]*67Atlantic Bailroad for personal injuries which lie received while employed by the defendant as a driller in the construction of a tunnel. Between the filing of the suit and the service of process he made a settlement with the railroad, and the case thereafter proceeded merely for the recovery of an amount for the fees of his attorneys, who were employed on a contingent basis. The trial resulted in a verdict in his favor for $300 payable to the attorneys, and the defendant excepts to the overruling of its motion for a new trial.

We think that irrespective of the settlement the defendant was not liable. The plaintiff was working as a driller in a tunnel in which dynamite was used to break up the earth and rock. When a charge of dynamite was placed and about to be shot, the workmen would leave the tunnel and go to a place of safety. After the explosion they would return for the purpose of removing the earthern matter and of putting in timbers to brace the sides and walls. According to the petition, the plaintiff’s injury occurred under these circumstances: After a certain heavy explosion of dynamite one Joe Phillips, who was the foreman in charge of the work, said to the plaintiff: “Tom, you and the other fellow come here and help put this timber back,” and as the plaintiff responded to this command Phillips further said, “I am going to watch it, and if it looks like anything is going to fall, I will holler, and then you fellows get back out of the way.”

The petition alleged, that, although the foreman well knew that certain supports had been displaced and that others were about to fall, he yet ordered the plaintiff “to go into this place of danger;” that the plaintiff was unaware of the danger and could not have discovered the same by the exercise of ordinary care. The tunnel was made dark by smoke and poor lights, and as the plaintiff was clearing away the fallen timbers and was stooping for this purpose, rocks and timber began to fall, and the plaintiff was struck and injured thereby. The plaintiff relied upon the judgment of the foreman and his promise- to give warning of any danger, and the “injury was occasioned by the fault and negligence of the defendant railroad as aforesaid and entirely without fault whatsoever on the part of the plaintiff.”

TJpon the question of original liability the plaintiff’s testimony was as follows: “I went on back to my drill and knocking timber [68]*68loose. Mr. Phillips said, ‘ Tom, you and that other fellow come back and help put this timber back.’ The fellow in front of me started and I started, and the timber fell, knocking me on the head, kind of addled me, knocked me around, I got straight and went on around there and went to picking up rocks, and he said, í I will go back and holler, when I holler jrou all get out of the way.’ I stooped over and I never heard him holler; something hit me on the foot and something on the shoulder, something, two by four, I think. When it hit me it knocked me down. I don’t know whether it knocked me across the tunnel; I was kind of addled; when I come to myself they had me, going out with me. It knocked me unconscious. This man Phillips that I speak of, he was the foreman, agent of the W. & A. up there on that job, and he was the man that said this, Tom, you and the other fellows come here and help put the timber back,’ and he was the man that said, ‘ I am going to watch that up there, and when I holler you all get out of the way;’ and I just went on and picked up rock, and I fell; I didn’t hear him holler, something hit me on the foot and shoulder, they said it was a two by four, these fellows took me out, I didn’t know what it was. . . Something hit me on the head, that was the timber before that fell from the top, head and shoulder. . . I was working in a new tunnel, taking another fellow’s place drilling for a few minutes, drilling to load dynamite to blast. I drilled holes and loaded that dynamite and the dynamite was set off, and all about went back to a place of safety while that was discharged. That was the custom under which I worked there in the tunnel. After the dynamite went off I would come back and begin to move the loose dirt and stuff. I had been doing that all the time since they had been building the tunnel, since I had been there, and some timber that was put in there to kind of brace the sides of the wall, so forth, while I was working in the tunnel, got knocked loose in this shot of dynamite. They had a hole drilled under that timber. That was the first one that had been shot out since I had been there. I did not go back up there and see that this timber was loose, could not see nothing for the smoke. The man did not tell me to get up there and fix some timbers that were loose. I had been drilling in a fellow’s place, and he said, Tom, you and that fellow come over here and help put the timber back up;’ the timber was shot out, [69]*69I guess. I started and he went ahead of me and the timber shot out and fell and knocked me back against another fellow. After that piece of timber fell and knocked me back I did not get up and start to go on to work, and some more fell and rock fell and hit me. I got kind of straight and went down to move some rock where they could set it back. He said, ' I am going to get back here and watch, and when I holler, you all get out of the way.’ I did not hear him holler, something hit me on the head and feet. It cut a little gash on my head. That would not have prevented me from going on with my work. The thing that fell and hit me did not fall there, at another place that I went, it runs from the same beam, the same beam was loose from that one that fell, and was shot loose by the same charge, of dynamite, I suppose, as the first was. . . The boss man said he would holler and for us to get out of the way. I had just stooped over. I did not hear bim holler. . . I went on in after that and it fell and hit me. . . My duty in the tunnel was anything the boss told me to do. I had been working, moving stuff out of the tunnel as a laborer. . . I say the man’s name was Joe Phillips, he was foreman, he was the man that was to warn me. I don’t know whether he warned me or not, he backed off.”

The plaintiff neither alleged nor testified to any latent defect in the place of work, and the case is made to depend upon what seems to have been-regarded as a negligent order of the foreman and the failure of the foreman to keep his promise to watch and to give warning “if it looked like anything was going to fall.” Certainty, in the absence of any actionable negligence on the part of the foreman, the plaintiff would be barred by the rule that the duty of the master to furnish the servant a reasonably safe place in which to work does not apply to such places as are constantly shifting and being transformed as a direct result of the servant’s labor, and where the work in its progress necessarily changes the character for safety of the place in which it is performed, as it progresses. In such a case the dangers are included in the ordinary risks of the employment, and’the servant, by accepting such employment, necessarily assumes them. Holland v. Durham Coal &c. Co., 131 Ga. 715 (63 S. E. 290); Thomas v. Georgia Granite Co., 140 Ga. 459 (79 S.E. 130).

Nothing contrary to this principle was decided in Terry Ship[70]*70building Corp. v. Griffian, 153 Ga. 390 (112 S. E.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 S.E. 628, 40 Ga. App. 66, 1929 Ga. App. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-atlantic-railroad-v-edwards-gactapp-1929.