5 Ga. App. 777 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1909
Attleton brought suit in the city court of Macon •against the Bibb Manufacturing Company, to recover damages for personal injuries. Demurrers, both general and special, to the plaintiff’s petition were sustained. To this ruling the plaintiff excepts. It is only necessary to pass upon the judgment sustaining the general demurrer. The allegations of the petition, briefly stated, are as follows: Plaintiff was an employee of the defendant company. He was 62 years of age and in sound health, and had been in the employ, of said company for about five months, in its yarn factory, in the capacity of card grinder. His duties were “to grind cards, look after and keep on all of the belts of the card-machines, and keep them running. The card referred to is a manufacturing machine which cards the cotton and prepares it for the drawing frames. . . There are upon each machine five belts, which petitioner was required to watch, keep on, and Ikeep running.” He was required to look after a number of these
There is no error in the judgment excepted to. Conceding the truth of all properly pleaded allegations of the plaintiff’s petition, the defendant is not liable. The plaintiff had been working in the defendant’s mill as a card-grinder for about five months. Part of his duty as such was to adjust belts on the carding-machines when they slipped out of place. He was in a position to know the dangers incident to this kind of work. It is difficult to-see why, by the exercise of ordinary powers of observation, he could not have at the time ascertained whether there was sufficient, light for him to attempt, without hazard, to operate the moving machinery in the manner required of him. His close proximity to the machinery at that particular time, and his familiarity with
The promise of the superintendent to have the lights repaired did not excuse the negligence of the plaintiff in working near the revolving machinery in the dark. It is clear that the servant is chargeable with knowledge of the conditions, where the defect was one of such an obvious kind that, if he had been making ordinary use of his eyesight at the time he was injured, he could not have failed to observe that it had not been repaired.' 1 Labatt on Master and Servant, §432. If the superintendent had ordered the plaintiff, in so many words, to adjust the belting in the dark, he would not have been justified in obeying; as to do so was manifestly dangerous. A compliance with a command from which it is evident to the servant that injury will likely result, and where to do so would be obviously rash, throws upon him the burden of assuming the risk. It is not the policy of the law that a person who wantonly places himself in a perilous situation, even though commanded by another to do so, can escape the consequences of