Hunter v. D. W. Alderman & Sons Co.
Hunter v. D. W. Alderman & Sons Co.
Opinion of the Court
The opinion in this case was filed on September 6, 1911, but remittitur held up on petition for rehearing until
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The plaintiff was employed in June, 1906, as a saw filer in the defendant’s large sawmill at Alcolu. On the morning of June 2 plaintiff inquired of Robert Alderman, the manager, if the mill would run that day, and on being informed that it would not he went into the saw pit to adjust the mill. The valve in the pipe between the boiler and the engine having been opened, the blowing of the whistle at the noon hour caused the saw to move and cut the plaintiff. For the injury so received this action was brought, and on the trial the verdict was in favor of the defendant.
There was no doubt that the injuries were caused by the negligence of some one. The issues on the trial were: Was there-any negligence of the defendant operating as a proximate cause of the injury? Was the injury due solely to the negligence of the plaintiff or to the negligence of a fellow-servant? Was the plaintiff guilty of contributory negligence? On the part of the plaintiff there was evidence that he was charged with the duty of adjusting the mill as well as filing the saws, that he went into the pit after notifying the manager that he wished to adjust the mill and receiving his assurance that the mill would not run, and that he was employed in 'that work in the saw pit, a very dangerous place, when the saws were started without warning, in consequence of the blowing of the whistle by Simon Wither-spoon, the fireman. That the fireman was a fellow-servant of the plaintiff was not in dispute, but plaintiff undertook to prove that he blew the whistle in obedience to the order of D. G. Hankinson, and that Hankinson was the representative of the master. The plaintiff admitted that there was a safety device called a tightener, and that if he had raised it before going into the pit the saws would not have moved when the engine started; but he and others testified that the *505 raising of the tightener would have interfered in some degree with the adjustment of the mill.
On the part of the defendant Robert Alderman, the manager, admitted that he had told the plaintiff that the mill would not run that day, but denied that the plaintiff was charged with the work of adjusting the mill. There was evidence that the tightener was provided for the express purpose of disconnecting the saws from the engine so that work could be done on the saws and in the saw pit without danger of injury.
Applying this rule, we think there was some evidence for the consideration of the jury on the issue whether Hankinson was a fellow-servant or the representative of the master *507 in directing the fireman to blow the whistle. He testified that he was foreman of a gang of laborers with authority to employ and discharge, that he did not employ the fireman, but was allowed to direct him to the extent of telling him when to blow the whistle so as not to work the laborers over time, and that on this occasion he did direct the fireman to blow the whistle. The testimony of the plaintiff that the manager, who was the general representative of the defendant, had assured him that it would be all right for him to adjust the mill as the machinery would not run that day, tended to show a special obligation assumed by the master with respect to the safety of the place of labor. If it be true that the master assumed this special obligation to keep the place of labor safe by not starting the machinery, and it was started by the direction of a person who was intrusted by the master with the authority to require an act to be done which would start the machinery, such act would be the act of the master and such person the representative of the master in that particular act.
There was evidence tending to show that Hankinson was not the representative of the master, but a mere fellow-, servant; but the considerations above set out show that there was also evidence tending to show that he was the representative of the master. In charging the jury that they could draw no other inference from the evidence than that Hankinson was a fellow-servant of the plaintiff, we think the Circuit Court erred, but we express no opinion as to what conclusion the jury should draw from the conflicting evidence on the subject.
It is the judgment of this Court that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed, and the cause be remanded to that Court for a new trial.
Reference
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- 1. Mastee and Servant. — A single act of negligence on the part of a servant does not show incompetency or that the master knew or ought to have known the servant was incompetent. 2. Ibid.- — Negligence.—Where a servant in discharging his duty has the choice of two ways — one entirely safe and the other obviously and greatly dangerous — and he adopts the dangerous way and is injured, he is guilty of negligence and cannot relieve himself of the consequences by showing that was the customary way of performing that duty. 3. Ibid. — The request that the servant could recover if he was negligent in not adopting a safe way, if that was not the proximate cause of the injury, as made here, is defective in that it assumes that the alleged cause of the injury was the negligence of the master and not of a fellow-servant. 4. Ibid. — Fellow-Servant.—Where the master assumes to keep the machinery still so that his servant may adjust it, and it is started by the order of one who is entrusted by the master with the authority to require an act done which would start it, such act would be that of the master and the one giving- the order would be the representative of the master in that particular act. 5. Rehearing refused1.