Dover v. Lockhart Mills
Dover v. Lockhart Mills
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Plaintiff sought to reoover d'amages for injuries received while assisting a fellow servant in putting a belt on a pulley which was revolving very rapidly.. The belt broke and the end of it struck and hurt plaintiff’s hand. Plaintiff was 47 years of age, and- had been- working in the mill about 30 days. By the use of a lever near at hand, he could have stopped the machine and put the belt on with safety; and the person whom he was assisting testified that be told him several times to do so, but plaintiff refused, and insisted on putting the belt oni while the pulley was in motion. The defenses were a general denial, and the pleas of contributory negligence and assumption of risk.
The first specification of negligence in the -complaint was, “in not furnishing plaintiff with safe machinery, and a safe place in which- to work, in that the said belt was old, unsafe, defective, worn out, thereby causing the said belt to- break easily.”
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*233 After the jury had ..been out some time, they were brought in and the Court gave them further instructions, of which the following portion is complained of in the ninth exception: “Now, on the other hand, if the belt was so rotten and defective, so obviously dangerous as claimed on the part of the plaintiff, and he went and picked it up, and it was such a belt that any reasonable man could see was defective, and he deliberately put it on a moving piece of machinery, regardless of any rule, or any instructions, if any, you would have to say from the testimony whether or not he exercised, under the circumstances, the care a reasonable man would have done in. putting a belt on a moving piece of machinery, and the question would be then, could he recover if he had seen, or could have seen, that it was a defective belt, and that comes under the head of contributory negligence.”
•The errors assigned are that the Judge charged on the facts, (1) in stating what facts or series of facts would constitute contributory negligence; and (2) that it was inferable from the charge that, in his opinion, the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence.
It will be seen from any analysis of the language above quoted that the facts are stated hypothetically, and that it was left to the jury to say whether, if they found the facts so stated to be true, the plaintiff was guilty of negligence ; and, if so, whether his negligence contributed to his injury as a proximate cause thereof. The Judge did not say what fact or series of facts would amount to negligence; nor can there be gathered from the language used any intimation of his opinion as to the facts.
The errors assigned are (1) that the judge charged on the facts, in stating what facts- or series of facts would amount to carelessness; and (2) in charging that while a servant has the right to assume that the appliances furnished him by his master are safe and suitable, nevertheless, he m-ust exercise ordinary care to ascertain if they are, and if it is apparent that they are not, and he uses them and gets hurt, he cannot recover of the master.
The first assignment of error is untenable, for certainly, if a man walks' into “apparent danger, and without the slightest exercise of his faculties takes up a thing which the slightest degree of care would show him was unsafe,” he is guilty -of negligence, which is the lack of -only ordinary care. But there was error in charging that a servant must use ordinary -care to ascertain if the machinery and appliances furnished him by his master are safe. A servant *235 may, without inspection, assume and rely upon the assumption that the machinery and appliances furnished him by the master are safe and suitable, and he is not bound to use ordinary care to ascertain if they are so; but if he knows that they are not, or if it is obvious or apparent that they are not, and he uses them and is injured, he may be held to have assumed the risk, or to have been guilty of contributory negligence, except under circumstances of which.there is no proof in this case.”
By reference to the charge, it will be seen that the law upon this point had been correctly stated several times, and it was so stated immediately preceding the language complained of. Just before and in connection with the language complained of, the Judge had said, “a man can not walk into an apparent danger and without the slightest exercise of his faculties, take up a thing which the slightest degree of care would show him that it was unsafe,”' etc.; and just after the language complained of, he said: “If it is apparent that it is unsafe,” etc., which, taken in connection with the context and with the whole charge, shows that the idea which the Judge intended to convey and did convey was that while a servant has the right to assume and rely upon the assumption that the machinery and appliances furnished him are safe and suitable, still he can not, under cover of that assumption, expose himself to obvious danger, and hold the master liable for the injurious consequences, except as above stated, under circumstances which appear not to have existed in this case. We are satisfied, therefore, that the error was not prejudicial.
The fifth exception complains of error in not charging that the burden was upon a defendant to prove that the injury was caused by the negligence of a fellow servant.
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Judgment affirmed.
Reference
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- Dover v. Lockhart Mills.
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- 1. Charge — Master and Servant — Appliances—Appeal.—Exception assigning error in the use of “and” in the phrase “the burden is on plaintiff to prove the place at which he was put to work was not safe and suitable and that the belt was old, unsafe and defective” in italics where “or” should have been used, held not well taken in trial under complaint alleging as specification of negligence that belt had become defective from long use. Such inadvertences should be called to the attention of the trial Judge if they are to be made ground of appeal. 2. Evidence. — Allegations to the effect that a belt was unsafe and defective in that it was old and worn out will not support evidence that it was too tight. 3. Charge — Negligence.—Instruction complained of here as to contributory negligence held to have been stated hypothetically and not to be a statement by the Judge of what facts or series of facts would amount to negligence, nor any intimation of his opinion as to the facts. 4. Ibid. — Master and Servant — Assumption of Risks. — Instructions here complained of relating to assumption of risks, held when construed with its settings, to mean a servant has the right to assume and rely on the assumption that the machinery and appliances furnished him are safe and suitable, but under that cover he cannot expose himself to an obvious danger. 5. Burden of Proof. — Under general denial to a complaint alleging injury from negligence of master, the burden is not on defendant to show the injury was caused by the negligence of a fellow servant or by the sole negligence of plaintiff, but on plaintiff to show injury . was caused by the negligence of the master. 6. Jury — Verdict.-—The acts of the Judge, after jury had been out for some time, in insisting on their finding a verdict and giving them again the salient points of the law of the case, held not to tend to coerce a verdict, but to he within the duty of the trial Judge. The length of time a jury should be kept considering a case is within the discretion of the trial Judge.