Robertson v. Tennessee Coal, Iron & Railroad

DOWDELL, C. J.

The plaintiff was injured by falling from the roof of a shed over a boiler, where he was at the time engaged in painting the roof. To do this work a ladder Avas used, which laid flat upon the roof, “and was held onto said roof by a cross-piece so nailed to the upper end thereof as to form a miter joint or angle therewith, which so fit over the comb of the roof of said shed as to hold said ladder thereon; said crosspiece extending the entire width of the upper end of said ladder.” One Sam Rolen, another employee of the defendant, was engaged with the plaintiff in doing the painting of said roof. There were tAvo ladders furnished by the defendant for doing the work, one for each man, and both similarly constructed for hooking *591over the comb of the roof, to prevent sliding off, though one ladder was heavier than, the other. The plaintiff went to work on Friday morning painting the roof, and for his work selected the heavy-weight ladder, which he used, all day Friday' and up to about 9 o’clock on Saturday, with safety; Sam Bolen, the other employee, using the light-weight ladder. Saturday morning about 9 o’clock the plaintiff abandoned his ladder, throwing it off on the other side of the roof, because, he says, “the heavy-weight ladder on which he was at work began to shoAv some tendency to jump up at the upper (or comb) end thereof.” The plaintiff, after discarding the ladder that had been furnished him and which had served its purpose with safety to him, got upon the other ladder with Sam Bolen. This he did of his own volition and accord, and Avithout any order or direction by the superintendent of the defendant, or, as for that matter, of any one. Shortly after getting upon the ladder with Bolen, the ladder slid off of the roof of the shed, carrying the plaintiff and Bolen to the ground with it, a distance of 12 feet, when the plaintiff received the injuries complained of. In the fall the lateral bars of the ladder were broken. The foregoing statement of facts Avas in substance the plaintiff’s own evidence, testifying as a Avitness in his own behalf, and was without dispute or conflict.

Evidently the sliding of the ladder from the roof Avas the result of its becoming detached from the comb, where the cross-piece, or “miter joint,” at the upper end of the ladder hooked over the comb, and that this was occasioned by the plaintiff’s getting upon it and putting it to a double service, and which Avas not intended or directed by the superintendent. The two ladders furnished by the defendant, as long as used as intended and directed by the superintendent, proved to be safe for *592their purposes. On the undisputed evidence we fail to see wherein the defendant or its superintendent was guilty of any negligence.

The plaintiff was a man, and presumably one of ordinary intelligence. The work of painting the roof in the manner in which it was directed to be done by the superintendent of the defendant was not attended with any dangers which were not open to a man of ordinary intelligence, and the failure of the superintendent to instruct and warn the plaintiff, therefore, would not constitute negligence.

There was no evidence of any defect in the ladder that proximately caused the plaintiff’s injury. The mere fact alone that the ladder was broken by the fall from the roof to the ground with two men on it does not prove that it was defective or insufficient for the purpose for which it was intended. Moreover, the plaintiff, by his own voluntary act in getting on the light-weight ladder already occupied by Rolen, was the immediate cause of the accident that resulted in his injury.

The defendant, on the undisputed evidence, was entitled to the general charge requested, and the trial court committed no error in giving it.

The court sustained demurrers to counts á and 6 of the complaint. If there was error in this ruling, which, however, we do not decide, it was harmless error, since the result would have been the same if these counts had remained in. We find no reversible error in the record, and the judgment, therefore, must be affirmed.

Affirmed.

All the Justices concur.