Karlinsey v. Watson Co.
Karlinsey v. Watson Co.
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
There is no variance between the negligence charged in the plaintiff’s statement and the evidence received in support. The former charged that the defendant “through its servants, foremen, agents or employees, or one of them, without notice or warning to the plaintiff, carelessly, recklessly and negligently cast or threw a ponderous and heavy grain door, such as are used in doorways of box cars, down through an open hatchway from the second floor above to the first floor below where the plaintiff was in the careful and lawful discharge of his duties......striking the plaintiff on the head.” The evidence was all in direct affirmance of this statement of facts. It showed that on the floor immediately above where the plaintiff was employed, the defendant had been making-repairs or improvements to its plant, using bricks and mortar in connection therewith; that the work having been completed the foreman then in charge directed an employee to remove the unused material or, as the foreman himself related it, “to clean up the floor and take the stuff down”; and it was while the employee was so engaged, the plaintiff who was on the floor immediately below, was struck on the head by the door which had been used as a mortar board on the floor above, and which had been precipitated through an
Reference
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- Karlinsey v. Watson Company
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- Syllabus
- Negligence — Master and servant — Variance—Worh done under order of foreman. In an action by an employee against his employer to recover damages for personal injuries, the statement charged that the defendant through its servants, foremen, agents or employees negligently threw a heavy door through an open hatchway to the place where the plaintiff was working, injuring him. From the evidence it appeared that on the floor immediately above where the plaintiff was employed there was a quantity of debris, including the door which debris the foreman in charge directed an employee to remove, which the employee did by throwing the material down the ■hatchway. It was evident from the testimony of the foreman that the employee had not disregarded the instructions of the foreman in removing the material, but that on the contrary the foreman anticipated that the hatchway would be used for the purpose of removing the material. Meld, that there-was no variance between the statement and the negligence shown that the case was for the jury and a recovery for the plaintiff was sustained.