Heindirk v. Louisville Elevator Co.

OPINION op the Court by

Chief Justice Hobson—

Affirming.

Appellant, Ben Heindirk, filed bis petition in tbe circuit court to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by him. Appellee, tbe Louisville Elevator Company, filed a general demurrer to tbe petition, wbicb was sustained by tbe circuit court, and, be failing to plead further, tbe action as to it was dismissed, and be appeals.

He alleged in bis petition, in substance, tbat be was in tbe employment of tbe Howe Manufacturing Company; tbat in tbe course of bis employment be was required to operate a machine, consisting of a ball and socket joint, described as a large knob or ball of iron fitting or Working in a socket of iron, and capable of revolving therein; tbat tbe machinery was extremely heavy, and wtas required to sustain in the operation of it great force and pressure; that it was manufactured by tbe Louisville Elevator Company, and sold by it to the Howe Manufacturing Company, wbicb company furnished it to him to be used by him *678in the business of the Howe Manufacturing Company; that the machinery was manufactured by the Louisville Elevator Company .in such .a negligent and defective manner as to be inadequate for the purposes for which it was made by the Louisa ville Elevator Company; that in casting or molding the ban joint the elevator company left in it defects, the result of negligence in casting- or molding it; that these defects in the machinery were known to the elevator company, or could have been known by the exercise of ordinary care; that the elevator company knew the use to> which the machinery was to be put; that he did not know of the dangerous condition of the machinery, and could not have known of it by the exercise of ordinary care; that he did not have any opportunity or facility of knowing its dangerous condition, but that such opportunity and facility were possessed by the defendant; that while he was using the machinery for the purposes for which it had been manufactured and supplied to him, and while exercising reasonable care, the machine, by reason of its defective and dangerous condition, exploded, breaking Ms ankle and seriously and permanently injuring him. ' It is not charged that the elevator company knew of the defects in the machinery. The charge is that it knew, or could have known by the exercise of ordinary care and diligence, of the defects in the machinery, and that these defects rendered it dangerous and insufficient for the purposes for which it was intended.

As the pleading must be taken against the pleader, this is. only an allegation that the defendant by ordinary care might have known the facts. In King v. Creekmore, 117 Ky., 172; 77 S. W., 689; 25 Ky. Law Rep., 1292, Creekmore owned a sawtmilT which *679he leased to Warren, and while Warren was operating it the boiler exploded; seriously injuring King, who1 was an employe of Warren. It was charged that the boiler was defective, and was known- to be so by the defendant, or that he by ordinary care might have known of. its dangerous and defective condition. It was held that C-reekmore was not liable. This ease was followed in Simons v. Gregory, 85 S. W., 751; 27 Ky. Law Rep., 509, where a passenger in an elevator sought to hold the maker of the elevator liable, When he was injured by the fall'of the elevator after it had been run for months, and broke down by reason of its being operated by an inexperienced and unfit person. A number of authorities sustaining the rule laid down' are collected in these opinions-. Summing up the authorities on this question in a note to Woodward v. Miller, 100 Am. St. Rep., 200, Judge Freeman says; “The manufacturer or vendor of a tool, machine, or appliance, which is not in its nature intrinsically dangerous, is not ordinarily liable for defects therein to one not in privity with him. This has been held to be the law in respect to a land roller,* * * a drop press-, * * * a threshing machine cylinder, * * * a balance wheel, * * * a steam boiler, * * * a hoisting apparatus, * * * a gasoline pear burner, * * * a passenger elevator, * * * or a freight elevator.”

There are some well recognized exceptions to the rule. One is where the thing is imminently dangerous to human life. Thus, where a druggist sold and labeled.as “extract of dandelion,” which is harmless, a jar of extract of belladonna, which is a deadly poison, he was held liable to a third person injured by it. Thomas v. Winchester, 6 N. Y., 97; 57 Am. *680Dec., 455. The sarnie principle has been applied to a loaded gun, or a scalffold 90 feet high built for a painter to use ini painting the steeple of a church (Dixon v. Bell., 5 Maule & S., 198; Bishop v. Weber (Mass.), 1 N. E., 154; 52 Am. Rep., 715; Devlin v. Smith, 89 N. Y., 470; 42 Am. Rep., 311; Meers v. McDowell, 110 Ky., 926; 23 Ky. Law Rep., 461; 62 S. W., 1013; 53 L. R. A., 789; 96 Am. St. Rep,, 475), or where naphtha was sold for oil (Wellington v. Downer Kerosene Oil Company, 104 Mass., 64), or where poisonous ice cream was sold by a manufacturer as food at a ball (Bishop v. Weber (Mass.), 1 N. E., 154; 52 Am. Rep., 715). See, also, McCaffrey v. Mossberg, etc., Manufacturing Company (R. I.), 50 Atl., 651; 55 L. R. A., 822; 91 Am. St. Rep., 637; Huset v. Case Threshing Machine Company, 120 Fed., 865; 57 C. C. A., 237; 61 L. R. A., 303, and cases cited. Another exception is made where the person whose negligence causes the injury invites or induces the plaintiff to use the defective appliance (Coug'htry v. Globe Woolen Company (N. Y.), 15 Am. Rep., 387), or where a manufacturer makes fraudulent representations-, or knows- the defects or fraudulently paints them over, or so conceals them that they can not be discovered (Schubert v. Clark (Minn.), 51 N. W., 1103; 15 L. R. A., 818; 32 Am. St. Rep., 559; Woodward v. Miller (Ga.), 46 S. E., 847; 64 L. R. A., 932; 100 Am. St. Rep., 188, and cases cited in note). The ease before us does not fall within any of the exceptions laid down to the general rule, which seems to be supported by substantially the entire current of authr-Gt’-’-. It is not shown that the dangerous conditio^ or the machinery was known to the elevator company, and it is not alleged that the machinery in *681its condition was imminently dangerous to human life, and there is nothing alleged to take the ease out of the general rule.

Judgment affirmed.