125 Ga. 571 | Ga. | 1906
(After stating the facts.) The demurrer speaks the truth when it says that the petition shows the plaintiff had equal means with the defendant of knowing the condition of the machine with which he was working; but the demurrer is not well taken, in so far as it assumes that the plaintiff had equal moans of knowing the nature of the gas generated and all other facts related in the petition respecting the danger of using the machine. On the contrary, the pleader expressly asserts that the plaintiff was ignorant of the character of the gas generated, and of the fact that the defective condition of the machine rendered its use most dangerous, a1 fact which was actually known to his employer; and certainly the
The demurrer raises but two questions which really call for any discussion, (1) whether, under the facts alleged, the master was under any legal duty of warning the servant as to the nature of the gas generated by the machine which he was called on to use, and (2) whether the plaintiff offers any sufficient legal excuse for not knowing that the use of a machine which generated that -kind of gas was under any and all circumstances more or less dangerous, and attended with great hazard when the machine was in a defective condition. The master had discarded machines in which the neces
Judgment affirmed.