Seybert v. Hay Walker Brick Co.
Seybert v. Hay Walker Brick Co.
Opinion of the Court
A review of the evidence has not convinced us the learned court below erred in directing a verdict for defendant company on the ground the plaintiff failed to show that the company was guilty of negligence which caused the death of her husband. The deceased was the foreman of a crew engaged in removing a piece of structural steel from the brick shed to the pug mill.
The deceased was not inexperienced in such work and needed no instructions how to perform it. He had been engaged for eight years at various kinds of labor about defendant's plant. He and his crew had unloaded a steam engine and structural steel from cars, including this particular piece of steel, some months prior to the accident resulting in his death. He had also unloaded steel bents and kiln bands and placed them in position, and assisted in placing in position the pans and engines and boilers, the brick machines, the cutters and pug mill. It is apparent that the deceased was fully informed as to the manner of performing the work and knew the dangers incident thereto, and how to avoid them. Instructions were therefore unnecessary and the failure to give them was not negligence.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
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- Negligence — Master and servant — Death—Duty to give instructions — Directed verdict. ■ Where in an action to recover damages for the death of plaintiff’s husband, it appeared that at the time of the accident deceased was foreman of a crew engaged in moving a piece of structural steel by means of gas pipe rollers; that the manner in which the work was to be done was left entirely to deceased by defendant’s superintendent, and all the appliances .and tools necessary for performing the work were available for his use; that when the steel had been partly lowered its weight caused it to skid and fall upon the deceased, killing him; and that deceased had been engaged eight years about defendant’s plant and knew how to perform such work, the failure of the defendant to give instructions as to how the work was to be performed was not negligence, and in the absence of other facts from which negligence could be inferred the court did not err in directing a verdict for defendant.