Case ID: ky_202/html/0300-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Judge Clarke", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

Lewis v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Company.
    (Decided February 29, 1924.)
    Appeal from Boyd Circuit Court.
    Master and Servant — Negligence in Cutting Rail Held for Jury.— In an action under the federal Employers’ Liability Act (U. S. Comp. St. sections 8657, 8665), by a section hand, for injuries caused by a piece of steel striking him in the eye while holding a rail, whether defendant’s foreman placed a steel chisel which an-otter was striking outside of the groove already cut, and whether he was guilty of negligence, held for the jury.
    S. S. WILLIS and IB. S. WILSON for appellant.
    WORTHINGTON, BROWNING & REED and PRICHARD & MALIN for appellee.
   Dpinion op the Court by

Judge Clarke

Reversing.

On February 7, 1921, while appellant was assisting other members of his section crew in cutting a rail in two, a piece of steel struck him in the eye and destroyed it. To recover damages therefor he instituted this action under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, and the single question presented by this appeal is whether the court erred in directing a verdict for the defendant.

In cutting the rail -appellant was holding one end of it and his brother, Joe Lewis, the other. The foreman of the crew, A. J. Webb, was placing a steel chisel which another was striking with a 12 or 15 pound hammer. Appellant’s theory is that the accident resulted from Webb’s negligence in placing the chisel outside of the groove already cut, thereby chipping out a piece of the steel rail and causing it to strike him in the eye. To sustain this theory he introduced himself and his brother and the piece of steel that penetrated his eye.

The evidence conclusively shows that the piece of steel was from the rail and not from the hammer or chisel. Neither the appellant nor bis brother stated that he saw the foreman set the chisel outside of the groove already cut in the rail, but both testified that in their judgment the exhibited piece of steel could not otherwise have been cut or jerked out of the rail, and we are convinced from an examination of it that the piece of steel itself furnishes some, if not convincing, evidence that this is true. It is nearly an inch in length, about three-eighths of an inch in width, and possibly one-eighth of an inch in thickness on one side and almost as thin as a razor blade on the other. The two sides are smooth, apparently cut so, and as could have been done only by the chisel being set and struck in different places side by side on the rail.

This mute evidence that the piece of steel which came from the rail and struck appellant in the eye was not an ordinary sliver but a chip cut out of the rail by the foreman’s negligence in placing the chisel outside the groove already cut, renders it impossible that the resultant injury to appellant can be as reasonably attributed to non-negligence as negligence, or that it resulted from an ordinary hazard of the employment.

As a consequence, the many cases applying one or the other of these well-known doctrines and relied upon by appellee to sustain the court’s action in directing the verdict, are not applicable here. The court did not sustain the motion for a peremptory until after Webb had testified for defendant that he did not set the chisel outside the groove already cut in the rail, but his evidence simply contradicted the inference of negligence reasonably deducible from appellant’s evidence, and cannot of course justify the court’s action in directing a verdict for the defendant.

Wherefore the judgment is 'reversed, and the cause remanded for another trial consistent herewith.