Wilkinson Cooperative Glass Co. v. Dickinson

Wiley, J.

Appellant is a corporation engaged in the manufacture of window glass. Appellee was in its employ as a laborer, and bis employment required bim to pack glass in boxes for shipment. It was also bis duty, under bis employment, when the plant was not in -operation, and repairs were being made, to assist in making repairs. Some time after be began bis services witb tbe appellant, a destructive cyclone demolished tbe buildings, and made it necessary to make extensive repairs. Among other repairs to be made were those to tbe furnace in which the .glass was melted. Appellee was engaged witb other workmen in making these repairs, and when so engaged was .injured *232by being struck on tbe hand with a sledge. Appellee and tbe person wbo struck him were engaged in tamping what is designated as tbe “bench” of tbe furnace. Tbe manner of bis injury will be stated later, when considering tbe sufficiency of the evidence to sustain tbe verdict and judgment.

Tbe complaint is in two paragraphs, tbe first of which counts upon a common-law liability, based upon tbe alleged fact that Clark, wbo was handling tbe sledge, and wbo struck appellee’s band, was inexperienced and incompetent in tbe use of the sledge; that appellant knew of said fact, ánd continued him in its service with such knowledge, and that appellee was ignorant thereof. Tbe second paragraph is based upon subdivision two, section one, of tbe employers’ liability act (Acts 1893, p. 294, §7083 Burns 1901), and in this paragraph it is alleged that appellant’s superintendent, to whose order appellee and said Clark were bound to, and did conform, negligently directed them to- do tbe work in a particular manner.

1. Tbe issue was joined by a general denial, and a trial by jury resulting in a verdict for $750 in favor of appellee. Appellant’s motion for a new trial was overruled. While appellant has assigned several errors, tbe only one discussed is tbe overruling of its motion for a new trial. Tbe others are therefore waived. Appellant relies for a reversal upon two propositions, which were assigned as reasons for a new trial: (1) That tbe verdict is not sustained by sufficient evidence, and (2) that tbe court erred in permitting appellee to-amend bis complaint during the progress of tbe trial. We will consider these questions in their inverse order, because if there was error in permitting tbe amendment, tbe judgment would have to be reversed, and in that event it would be wholly unnecessary for us to consider tbe evidence.

2. In tbe original complaint appellee was sued in tbe corporate name of “Wilkinson Cooperative Window Glass Company.” It was discovered during tbe progress of tbe *233cause that its correct corporate name was “Wilkinson Cooperative Glass Company.” Upon discovering the error in designating appellant, counsel for appellee moved for leave to amend the complaint by striking out the word “Window,” and this motion, over appellant’s objection, was sustained. The motion also went to the summons issued in the cause and the answer which had been filed. The summons issued in this behalf was served upon the proper officers of the Wilkinson Cooperative Glass Company. It employed counsel, appeared to the action, and was making its defense. Under the statute providing for amendments to pleadings, and under the repeated decisions upon the question, the trial court has a large discretion in allowing or rejecting amendments, and, unless that discretion is abused, courts of appeal will not review it. §397 Burns 1901, §394 E. S. 1881; Citizens State Bank v. Adams (1883), 91 Ind. 280; McClellan v. Bond (1884), 92 Ind. 424; Burnett v. Milnes (1897), 148 Ind. 230; City of Huntington v. Folk (1900), 154 Ind. 91.

3. The amendment of appellee’s complaint by striking out the word “Window” was an immaterial amendment, and in nowise changed the issues. There is no showing of any character made that appellant was in anywise prejudiced by the amendment, and, this being true, it has no right to complain. Raymond v. Wathen (1895), 142 Ind. 367.

This brings us to the consideration of the question of the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict. As to the manner in which appellee was injured, the evidence is without conflict. Appellee and other employes were engaged in repairing one of appellant’s furnaces. The particular work in which they were engaged at the time appellee was injured was tamping the “bench” of the furnace. The word “bench,” as used in this connection, is described as meaning the “bottom or floor” of the furnace. The bottom or floor is made of “ground fire-clay, mixed with water, of the consistency for tamping with a heavy instrument, *234till it became solid and firm.” The tamping is done by placing a handle in. a heavy block of timber, raising the block by the handle, and forcing it down to the floor, until it becomes solid and level. This can only be done when there is. sufficient room or space to raise and lower the “tamp” perpendicularly. At the extreme edges of the floor, where it comes in contact with the walls of the furnace, this mode of tamping is not practicable, for the reason that the walls of the furnace are concave, or, as one witness describes it, because of the “angle” of the walls. Some other means of tamping that portion of the floor adjacent to the walls had to be devised, and the plan adopted in this instance was as follows: A square block of oak timber was procured. This block was from fourteen to eighteen inches in length, four inches wide and four inches thick. Appellee and one Clark were working together. Appellee would get down on his knees, and place this block on the floor, one end being placed against the wall, while he held the other end with his hand. Clark had a sledge, and with this he would hit or pound the block, and when the floor immediately under it became sufficiently compact, the block would be moved, and the same process continued. Clark was also on his knees while using the sledge. He hit the block with what the witnesses called an “up-and-down” stroke. We gather from this and all the evidence that he did not use a swinging blow, but gave the sledge all the force he could by the “up-and-down” stroke.

Appellee and Clark commenced this work by using a sledge weighing from four to five pounds. While they were thus engaged, Mr. R. R. Faulkner, appellant’s president and general superintendent, went to' the furnace to inspect the work. He said to the -workmen, in substance, that they were not doing the work right; that they “must get that down next to the wall;” that they must strike the block harder, and instructed them to get a heavier sledge. Thereupon Clark procured a ten-pound sledge, and proceeded *235with the work by striking the block with an “up-and-down” stroke. Faulkner told him to strike harder, so as to make the floor adjacent to the wall solid. Clark testified that he was striking as hard blows as he could by the “up-and-down” stroke, and that when Faulkner told him to strike harder he had to use a swinging blow, and in doing so the sledge came in contact with a stone that had been placed on the furnace longitudinally, by which the sledge was diverted, and it came down upon appellee’s hand, several inches from where he intended it should fall. This stone, with others of like character, had been placed in the top of the furnace. Clark had been wielding the sledge “overhand” several times prior to the blow that injured appellee, and had struck the piece of timber each time at the proper place, and he testified that that blow would have fallen at the proper place if it had not been diverted by striking the stone. Appellee and Clark had been working about the furnace, doing repair work, for several days, but had not done any work jointly until the day of the accident. Faulkner, Clark and appellee knew that the stones above referred to were on the furnace walls. They were to be used in completing the repairs. The particular stone with which the sledge came in contact projected from the furnace wall some eight or ten inches. Clark and appellee commenced the work in which they were engaged under the direction of‘ the “master teaser,” who directed the work in the absence of Faulkner.

Upon the issue tendered by the allegation in the first paragraph of the complaint, that Clark was inexperienced, and incompetent to handle a sledge, and that appellant knew and appellee was ignorant of it, the evidence shows, without conflict, that when he was employed he told Faulkner that he had never worked in a factory. He also testified that he had worked on a farm, and that all he knew about handling a sledge was what he learned while working on the farm. Clark testified that while he knew the stone he *236struck, in using the sledge, was projecting over the wall, he did not think he would strike it.

4. Under the evidence it must be held that Clark and appellee were fellow servants, and the general rule is that a master is not liable for injuries to a servant, resulting from the negligence or carelessness of a fellow servant. While it is tree that the question whether facts exist which malee two or more employes fellow servants is a question of fact, yet when such facts are determined, it becomes a question for the court to declare as a matter of law whether such facts bring the matter within the legal definition of a fellow servant. Keller v. Gaskill (1898), 20 Ind. App. 502.

5. There is no conflict in the evidence as to the relations existing between Clark and appellee. They were engaged in the same line of duty, working together for tire common interest of a common master. It follows, therefore, that appellant is not liable under the first paragraph of complaint, unless it has been established that appellant knew that Clark was incompetent to do the work in which he was engaged, and retained him in its employ, with knowledge of such incompetency. There is no evidence to sustain this proposition. Neither is there any reasonable inference to be drawn from the evidence that would lead to that conclusion. The kind of work Clark was engaged in did not require any special skill. The fact — and this is the only one in evidence— that he told Faulkner that he had never worked in a factory was not sufficient to establish the alleged -fact that appellant knew he was incompetent. The master must have notice of a servant’s incompetency to render him liable for injuries resulting therefrom. The competency of servants is presumed, and the burden rests upon a servant to prove that his fellow servant was incompetent, and that the master had notice of it. Chicago, etc., R. Co. v. Beatty (1895), 13 Ind. App. 604; Ohio, etc., R. Co. v. Dunn (1894), 138 Ind. 18. In this appellee has wholly failed.

*2376. Do the facts bring this case within the second subdivision of the employers’ liability act? These two men were engaged in simple, common labor, merely tamping the “bench” of a glass furnace to make it firm and level. There was no apparent danger to either of them from the manner in which they were doing the work. When Eaulkner told Clark that he must strike harder blows, to the end that they would be effective and accomplish the desired result, he went no* further than to tell him what was necessary to do. He gave no order or direction of the manner in which he was to do it. He did not tell him to ceáse striking tire “up-and-down” blow and h> use the “swinging” blow. There is not a word of evidence to' indicate that Faulkner knew that Clark was striking as hard as he could with the “up-and-down” .blow, and it would make no difference if he did know it. Neither does the evidence indicate that there was any more danger in striking the “swinging” than the “up-and-down” blow. Even after Clark began to use the “swinging” movement, he struck accurate blows, and the only reason that the one which injured appellee did not fall where it was intended was because it was diverted by coming in contact with the stone on the furnace wall. It is not alleged that the placing of the stone where it was was an act of negligence, and there is no evidence from which it can be deduced that it was negligence. The accident resulting in appellee’s injury was one which could not have béen reasonably anticipated, and for which the order or direction of Faulkner was in nowise responsible.

1. This is a case where the maxim damnum absque injuria applies, and there is no liability. This leads us to the conclusion that the evidence is not sufficient to sustain the verdict.

Judgment reversed, and the trial court is directed to sustain appellant’s motion for a new trial.