Lehman v. Birmingham MacHine & Foundry Co.
Lehman v. Birmingham MacHine & Foundry Co.
Opinion of the Court
Appellant sued appellee under the third subdivision of the Employers’ Liability Act, section 3910 of the Code, alleging that appellee’s employs Adams, to whose orders or directions appellant was hound to conform and did conform, had negligently ordered appellant “not to use a crane, but to. lift a piece of shafting of heavy iron or steel.” In several pleas of contributory negligence appellee alleged, to state its *296 pleas in short, that appellant, knowing the shaft was too heavy for two men to lift and that it was dangerous for him to attempt to lift it with the help of only one man, negligently did so. The general issue was also pleaded.
Stated with utmost favor to appellant, the evidence was that Adams directed appellant to get a negro and move a piece of steel shafting — which weighed, according to appellant’s highest estimate, about 240 pounds • — -to a point 125 to 150 feet away. Appellant summoned his help, and between them they moved the shaft according to directions. Appellant testified:
“When I started to let it down, I felt a pain strike me here, and I heard it” (inwardly; as hd explained) “tear like an old rotten rag or something, tearing inside, and I knew I was hurt.”
When he went to his medical man on a subsequent day, his trouble was pronounced to be hernia. An ele'ctric crane, affording a cheaper and speedier means of transportation, was at the time available for the movement of the shaft. Appellant, who was a stout man of 43 years, of long experience in the work for which he was employed, and with whom there “wasn’t anything in the world the matter,” had assisted in moving the shaft by hand a few days before. For the rest we may quote appellant’s language:
“I knew how much I was able to lift. Really I did not think. If I had thought, I would not have done it. I picked it up on the spur of the moment. Everything was busy around there and seemed to be in a hurry. If I had thought a moment, I would certainly have gotten the crane.”
And in his deposition, taken under the statute and put in evidence by appellee, appellant testified:
“I knew it was too heavy to lift at the time I was ordered to lift it. I did not make any objections to Mr. Adams or to any other of my superiors that the iron was too heavy for me to lift. I asked to be allowed to use the crane, * * * but Mr. Adams told me not to stop the crane for that, but to get a negro man and carry it myself, although the craneman -was not busy at the time.”
These statements and these excerpts from the bill of exceptions will serve to show the nature of the case.
The trial court, on appellee’s request in due form, gave the general charge with hypothesis, and that ruling alone is assigned for error.
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Lehman v. Birmingham Machine & Foundry Co.
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- 1 case
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- Published