(After stating the foregoing facts.) While the alleged negligence is set out under three heads, the petition shows that the substance of the alleged acts of negligence was that plaintiff’s helper failed to push the machine with his whole strength, and that this resulted in the injury; and we are called upon to decide whether or not the petition set out any actionable negligence on the part of the defendant.
This case was brought under the Federal employer’s liability act of 1908, amended April 5, 1910 (8 IT. S. Comp. St. Ann., § 8657), and under this act the plaintiff does not assume the risk due to negligence of a fellow servant “until he is aware of it, unless the risk is so obvious that an ordinary prudent person in his situation would know and appreciate it. ” Lehigh Valley R. Co. v. Scanlon, 259 Fed. 142. However, the allegations of the petition, which alone we must consider in deciding this issue, and which must be construed most .strongly against the pleader, show that the plaintiff was not only aware of the negligence of his coemployee in failing “ to push with his whole strength,” but that he fully “realized that the spring was not *753being moved from tbe rear end as it should. ” and after this realization he voluntarily “ applied his whole strength to his task, ” and was thereby injured. It cannot be said that the defendant company was negligent in furnishing an incompetent or inexperienced helper, because the petition sets out that “the helper knew what he had to do and what he was expected to do, and that was to push with his whole strength while petitioner pulled at his end of the spring. ” (Italics ours). The petition further shows that “it required the strength of both” petitioner and his helper to move the spring, but, notwithstanding this fact and the failure of the helper to push as he should, petitioner “put himself to 'extra exertion to accomplish it,” and in so doing was injured. (Italics ours). The petition thus shows that the plaintiff imprudently did more than was his duty and more than he was able to do, and by so doing brought about his own injury. He misconceived the amount of strength and exertion necessary. If plaintiff “misconceives the amount of physical strength to be exerted and overstrains himself . . and is thereby injured, the master is not liable.” Worlds v. Georgia R. Co., 99 Ga. 283 (2) (25 S. E. 646). This is true even where the injured party is given orders by one in authority to lift an object whereby he is injured, and it is therefore all the more true where one voluntarily lifts or pulls an object and overstrains himself without being ordered so to do, as in the instant case. See Pollard v. So. Ry. Co., 8 Ga. App. 337 (69 S. E. 28), and citations; Freeman v. Savannah Elec. Co., 130 Ga. 449, 454 (60 S. E. 1042), and cit.
The Federal employer’s liability act, under which this action was brought, does not abolish the defense of assumption of risk, save where the carrier’s violation of some Federal statute’ enacted for the safety of employees contributed to the .injury or death. The petition shows that plaintiff was a blacksmith in a railroad repair-shop, and, this being true, he would assume the ordinary risks and hazards of handling objects that are ordinarily found in such a shop and such as the petition shows he was handling at the time of his injury. The United States Supreme Court in Seaboard Air-Line Ry. v. Horton, 233 U. S. 492, 504 (34 Sup Ct. 635, 58 L. ed. 1062, L. R. A. 1915C, 1, Ann. Cas. 1915B, 475), said: “Some employments are necessarily fraught with *754danger to the workmen — danger that must be and is confronted in the line' of his duty. Such dangers as are normally and necessarily incident to the occupation are presumably taken into account in fixing the rate of wages, and a workman of mature years is taken to assume risks of this sort whether he is actually aware of them or not." See also Worlds v. Georgia R. Co., supra; Louisville & Nashville R. Co., v. Hood, 24 Ga. App. 769 (102 S. E. 133); Charleston Ry. Co. v. Sylvester, 17 Ga. App. 85 (86 S, E. 275). Plaintiff being a blacksmith, and employed in the shops of the defendant, and engaged at the time of his injury in repairing an engine-spring, it will be presumed that he was familiar with his work, with the machinery he was using, with the weight of this spring, and with the amount of physical strength necessary to accomplish the end sought. Moreover, he was handling the object in question at the time of his injury, and therefore had a better opportunity than the master of knowing of the danger incident to adjusting it -without proper assistance from his helper. Knowing that it required the strength of both, and realizing that his helper was not pushing as he should, petitioner put himself to extra exertion to accomplish the task, all of which is shown by the petition. The allegations of the petition do not show that the negligence charged against the defendant was the “main, controlling, preponderating,, or proximate cause of the injury," but, on the contrary, do show that the plaintiff misconceived the amount of physical strength necessary to be exerted and overstrained himself, and that this extra exertion was the proximate cause of the injury. The plaintiff, with the full knowledge of the negligence of his- helper, and with a clear chance to avoid this alleged negligence, chose not to avoid it, but to risk the danger of overexertion on his part. “This was not contributory negligence lessening the damages, but the failure to avoid a known danger, which defeats a right to recover." In Ayers v. L. & N. Railroad Co., 5 Ga. App. 454, 456 (63 S. E. 530), Judge Powell said: “Pleadings are construed most strongly against the pleader, . . and if the pleadings are capable of two constructions, the most unfavorable to the pleader must obtain. . . Negligence must be the proximate cause of the injury to be the basis of a recovery in damages. . . Even if the plaintiff was acting in haste or under a *755situation approaching an emergency, it was his own act from which his injury flowed proximately, and not the act of the master. ”
Under the foregoing it is clear that the petition sets out no cause of action, and the general demurrer should have been sustained. See Crooms v. Payne, 26 Ga. App. 739 (107 S. E. 276).
Judgment reversed.
Broyles, C. J., and Luke, J., concur.