Hartwell v. Columbia Mills
Hartwell v. Columbia Mills
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The respondent, Harwell, was an employee of the appellant mills. On the 4th day of October, 1916, while Harwell was at work, he went into a closet in the room in which he was working that had been provided for the comfort and convenience of employees. As he came out of the closet he stepped on a wet place on the floor, and fell to the floor and injured himself. This action was brought for damages for the failure of the mills to provide a safe place in which to work. The jury found a verdict for the plaintiff, and from the judgment entered upon the verdict the defendant appealed.
“This constituted error (a) in that it eliminated from the consideration of the jury the fact that a servant might assume' a risk of which he was fully aware, the danger oí which had existed for some time, and was perfectly obvious and apparent, even though the existence of such condition might be due indirectly to negligence of the master.”
This exception cannot be sustained. It was followed almost immediately by:
“If you find from the evidence that the plaintiff knew ot the wet and slippery condition of the floor over which he had to pass, if he did have to pass, and if the evidence that it was wet and slippery, or that by the exercise of ordinary care the plaintiff could have known of such condition, or that any reasonable man of ordinary care and prudence would have known of such condition, and that any reasonable man of ordinary care and prudence, knowing of such condition of the floor, would have realized the risk and danger in pass *181 ing over it, and would not have attempted to pass over it, and that the plaintiff, in attempting to pass over the floor, failed to exercise the ordinary care which would have been exercised by a person of ordinary prudence under similar circumstances, and that such failure to exercise ordinary care and prudence contributed, as a proximate cause, to his injuries, why, then, he could not recover.”
*182 “This was error (a) in that it eliminated from the consideration of the jury the fact reasonably inferable from the evidence that the wet spot was caused by the failure of a fellow servant to follow the instruction and use the means furnished him by the master to render the place safe, which fact would exonerate the master from liability, even though such failure did result in rendering the place unsafe; (b) in that it constituted a charge on the facts.”
The wet place was caused by the defective condition and location of the ice box and not by the sweeper. The master knew it. He knew it required constant attention. The floor was swept every hour and a quarter. The precaution (the sand) was removed every hour and a quarter. The place was made unsafe by the master and not by the fellow servant.
This was a statement of law, and not a charge on the facts.
“This was error in that (a) it constituted a charge on the facts; (b) it allowed the jury to speculate on a vague and uncertain possibility as an element of damage; (c) violated the true rule of damages, that where one suffering from a disability receives an injury he is only entitled to receive compensation to the extent of the aggravation of his previous condition.”
This exception cannot be sustained. The plaintiff brought out the fact that, on account of a predisposition of the plaintiff’s constitution, he was likely to suffer more than a man of normal constitution. The appellant brought out the fact on the cross-examination that the defect was a tendency to *183 tuberculosis. There is nothing in the charge to suggest that the jury might give damages for tuberculosis that might or might not develop. His Honor specifically told the jury, “You are to ascertain from the evidence on the stand what effect any injuries had on this particular man.” If the appellant thought it necessary to guard against the effect of the statement it brought out itself, then appellant should have requested his Honor to so charge.
The judgment is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Harwell v. Columbia Mills.
- Cited By
- 6 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Master aud Servant — Assumption op Risk — Knowledge op Danger. —A servant did not assume the risk of slipping upon a floor from the mere fact that he knew it was wet. 2. Master and Servant — Injuries to Servant — Safe Place to Work— Fellow Servant Doctrine.. — Where a floor was dangerous by reason of a leaky icebox* and plaintiff slipped and was injured at a time when sand had been swept from floor, mere fact that it was duty of another servant to oversee place and keep sand on floor did not free master from liability on ground that negligence was that of a fellow servant. 3. Trial — Instructions—Cure op Error. — That instruction eliminated from consideration of jury fact that a servant might assume risk of falling on a wet floor was cured by an instruction almost immediately following, that recovery could not be had if servant knew floor was wet when he stepped on it, or by exercise of ordinary care could have known of such condition. 4. Master and Servant — Injuries to Servant — Acts op Fellow Servant. — If master was negligent in failing to provide a safe place of work, he would be responsible if it caused injuries to servants, notwithstanding that negligent act of a fellow servant might have contributed to injuries also as a proximate cause. 5. Trial — Instructions — Requests — Effect op Evidence. — Where injured plaintiff sought to show that he would suffer greater injury because of predisposition, and defendant on cross-examination brought out that such predisposition was to tuberculosis, and Court instructed generally that jury could take into consideration greater injury because of some predisposition if shown by evidence, such instruction was not erroneous as allowing speculative damages because of the tuberculosis which might or might not develop, since defendant, if he wished to restrict effect of evidence brought out by him, should have requested an instruction to that effect. 6. Appeal and Error — Harmless Error — Admission op Evidence.- — -In action by servant for injuries by slipping on floor, it was harmless to allow a witness for plaintiff to state that defendant put sand on floor after the accident, where defendant’s witness stated without objection that sand had been put on the floor before, and that the orders required it.