Glasgow v. Pacific Mills
Glasgow v. Pacific Mills
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Action for tort to the person; recovery for an unstated amount; appeal by defendant.
These were the circumstances of the transaction: The plaintiff, a negro, was trucking bales of cotton linters from freight cars to an elevator in a cotton mill; the bales, four at a time, were loaded on the elevator, and thus loaded the elevator was then hoisted by electric power to a second floor above; three bales had been put on the elevator, and the plaintiff trucked the fourth bale and put it on; as the elevator went up with its load, a bale fell off it onto the plaintiff and sprained his left ankle and his right knee, and chipped a small piece of bone off just above the left ankle. The appellant argued four exceptions to the trial.
*387
“If the master fails by negligence to live up to any one of those duties by want of ordinary care, and that failure results in injury to another, that other can complain of it.”
*388 It is manifest, therefore, that by the authority cited by the appellant (1 Tabatt, par. 25) the Court made the failure to exercise ordinary care the test of the defendant’s liability.
The exceptions are all overruled, and the judgment is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Glasgow v. Pacific Mills.
- Cited By
- 4 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Master and Servant—Evidence' Admissible Under Pleading.— When an answer set up contributory negligence, it was competent for plaintiff, who was injured by a bale of cotton linters falling off an elevator, to testify that his -way of placing the bale on the elevator was according to instructions, although complaint did not allege that the master was negligent in giving such instructions. 2. New Trial—Misconduct of Counsel—Proof by Suggestion.—The asking of questions calling for incompetent and irrelevant testimony, which are not answered,.does'not call for setting aside of a verdict, unless they are persistently pressed after they have been, ruled out, with the manifest object to get by suggestion that which it is unlawful to prove directly. ■ • 3. Trial—Instructions:—An instruction that it was the duty of the master to furnish the servant safe, instead of “reasonably” safe, machinery was not reversible error, where immediately the Court said: “If the master fails by negligence to live up to any one of those duties by want of ordinary care, * * * that other can complain of it.” 4. Master and Servant—Injuries to Servant—Elevator—Question for Jury.—Whether master furnished a reasonably safe elevator, from which a bale of cotton linter fell on a servant, held, under the evidence, for the jury.