39 S.E. 715 | S.C. | 1901
September 6, 1901. The opinion of the court was delivered by This appeal comes from a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff, in an action for damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained through *471 defendant's negligence in failing to furnish an adequate force of laborers to do the work required of plaintiff as section track foreman, in the hauling and piling of steel rails, after application for additional help by the plaintiff and promise by defendant to supply the same. The sixth paragraph of the complaint alleged: "VI. That on the 15th day of February, 1900, while the plaintiff, in compliance with the orders of the defendant, was trying, with the assistance of his three hands, to carry one of the said steel rails up an embankment for the purpose of loading it on his car and hauling and piling it, as aforesaid, one of his said hands was entirely overcome and exhausted by the great weight of the said steel rail, on account of the failure of the defendant to furnish a sufficient force to carry the same, and fell to the ground, thereby causing the whole weight of one end of the said steel rail to be thrown on the plaintiff, by which his right leg was knocked out of place, his back injured, and a great strain put upon his whole body, causing a lesion of his kidneys and other internal organs." Besides the general denial, the defendant interposed as special defenses contributory negligence and assumption of risk after knowledge. The numerous exceptions of appellant will be considered under the subject heads following:
Amendment to answer. On motion of the defendant, appellant, over the objection of plaintiff, respondent, the Circuit Court permitted defendant to amend the answer by inserting the following: "8. That the said plaintiff went about the work in which he was engaged when he alleges to have been injured, with full knowledge of the manner in which said work was to be done, and of all the facts and circumstances connected therewith, that he directed the said work, and assumed all risks incident thereto." Plaintiff's counsel objected to this amendment under art. IX., sec. 15, which provides, "Knowledge by any employee injured of the defective or unsafe character or condition of any machinery, ways or appliances of any machinery, shall be no defense to an action for injury caused *472 thereby, except as to conductors or engineers in charge of dangerous or unsafe cars or engines voluntarily operated by them." The Circuit Court, in allowing the amendment, said that the first portion would be objectionable, but the additional clause, "and the plaintiff assumed all the risks, etc.," is sufficient to permit its allowance. Upon this appellant predicates the third exception, which assigns error (1) in holding that such amendment was permitted for the purpose of alleging assumption of risk only, and not for the purpose of setting up the defense that the defendant had knowledge of the alleged shortness of hands, and that such knowledge was a bar to his recovery; and (2) in holding that the allegations of negligence here come within the word appliances, as used in art. IX., sec. 15, of the Constitution. This exception cannot be sustained for several reasons. Appellant having been granted what was asked for, cannot complain whether the remarks accompanying were correct or not. Since the defense of assumption of risk must necessarily be based upon the employee's knowledge, either actual or constructive, we are unable to see wherein appellant has been prejudiced, whatever may be the correct view as to the meaning of the term "appliances," as used in the section of the Constitution referred to. But as we will show hereafter, the term "appliances," in sec. 15, art. IX., of the Constitution, includes a force of hands sufficient to operate the machinery, c., and if there was error in the ruling of the Circuit Court, it was in allowing the amendment at all.
The admissibility of certain testimony. The first and second exceptions assign error in allowing the plaintiff, Bodie, to testify as to damages to his eyesight, when there was no allegation in the complaint asking damage for such injury. The complaint alleged that plaintiff's "right leg was knocked out of place, his back injured and a great strain put upon his whole body, causing a lesion of his kidneys and other internal organs." The Circuit Court admitted the testimony as to impairment of eyesight in so far as it tended to show a result or effect of *473
the internal injuries alleged. This was not error, as shown by the recent case of Youngblood v. S.C. Ga. R.R. Co.,
Refusal of nonsuit. The fourth, fifth and sixth exceptions allege error (1) in that there was no evidence that the failure to furnish a sufficient force of hands was the proximate cause of the injury; (2) in that the evidence showed that the proximate cause of the injury was the accidental fall of a fellow-servant; (3) in that the evidence showed that plaintiff with knowledge assumed the risk of the injury alleged. These grounds were all satisfactorily disposed of by the Circuit Court in refusing the motion, in accordance with the well settled rule in this State, that nonsuit should not be granted when there is any evidence tending to establish the allegations of the complaint.
Negligence. The eighth exception complains of the charge to the jury in reference to the matter of negligence. The jury was charged: "Negligence simply means want of due care. That is a very short definition. If you weigh each word you will find that that contains the whole doctrine; want of due care, not simply want of care, but want of due care. From its very nature negligence may consist in the doing something which should not have been done. Negligence may also consist in leaving undone that which ought to have been done. It may, therefore, be a fault of omission as well as a fault of commission. [It is impossible for the Court to furnish a jury with a hard and fast measure of care, the presence of which, or the exercise of which, would drive away the idea of negligence, the absence of which would mean the presence of negligence. There is no such hard and fast rule which can be applied by a jury like a foot rule or a bushel measure, but there is a general principle which underlies the doctrine of negligence, and shows sufficiently clearly the measure of care proper in each particular case, and it is this: the greater the probability of danger in the particular circumstances, the greater is the required degree of care, because the measure of care naturally *474 varies in the different circumstances. For example, a man cutting wood with an axe must exercise a proper amount of precaution to guard against injuring other people that may be near him; but a man who is blasting rocks with dynamite, since there is much greater danger in handling that explosive than in holding an axe, is required to exercise a much greater degree of care. Due care in handling an axe in cutting wood would not be a sufficient measure of care in handling dynamite and blasting rock; but this shows you that the jury in each particular case has to establish from the testimony in the case exactly the measure of care which should have been exercised under the circumstances, and it is just that amount of care which would or should have been exercised by a man of ordinary intelligence and prudence. Your common sense and intelligence will guide you, in deciding by the testimony] in the case what amount of care should have been exercised by the railway company in the circumstances detailed in the testimony, and also will show you what amount of care should have been exercised by Bodie, the plaintiff, under the circumstances detailed, when you are considering the subject of contributory negligence, and I repeat: It is just that degree of care which a man of ordinary intelligence, common sense and prudence should have exercised under the same or similar circumstances, not absolute care, not the utmost care to guard against a possible danger, but only reasonable care, due care, that amount of precaution proper to guard against the probable danger." The exception is to that portion of the charge above which is within the brackets, and the specific errors assigned are (1) that the jury were instructed that in some cases a higher degree of care than due care is necessary to exempt from liability; and (2) the charge left to the jury the legal question, what degree of care was necessary in this case? We do not think the charge is amenable to either objection. The learned Circuit Judge, by his language and illustration, merely meant to show the jury that "negligence" is a relative term when applied to different cases or sets of circumstances, *475 and that the care or caution required in one case may be greater or less than the care or caution required in another; but the jury were plainly instructed that in anyparticular case or set of circumstances the law enjoined the duty of observing the care due under such circumstances; and the Court did not instruct the jury that in any case the law required a higher degree of care than due care. The jury were further instructed that the measure of the care due in any particular case was "that amount of care which would or should have been exercised by a man of ordinary intelligence and prudence," or "that degree of care which a man of ordinary intelligence, common sense and prudence should have exercised under the same or similar circumstances." The charge was, therefore, nothing more than what has been often approved in this State, viz: "Negligence is the want of ordinary care under the circumstances." A more comprehensive and scientific definition of negligence is that contained in 16 A. E. Ency. Law, 389, as follows: "Actionable negligence is the inadvertent failure of a legally responsible person to use ordinary care under the circumstances, in observing or performing a non-contractual duty implied by law, which failure is the proximate cause of the injury to a person to whom the duty is due." Negligence involves (1) a duty to exercise ordinary care under the circumstances; (2) a breach of such duty; (3) the breach being inadvertently, not want only nor intentionally made; (4) injury or damage resulting to the party complaining; (5) and that such injury be proximately caused by, or be the natural and probable result of such breach. The charge viewed as a whole fairly instructed the jury as to what matters constitute actionable negligence.
5. Assumption of risks. The eighteenth and twentieth exceptions complain of error in the charge to the jury on this subject. The defendant's sixteenth request to charge was as follows: "When an employee, after having had an opportunity to become acquainted with the risks of his situation, voluntarily accepts them and *476
continues in the performance of them, he cannot recover for his subsequent injury by such exposure." In response to this request, the Court said: "That is rather a bald statement of the doctrine. It is good law, to a certain extent, but it is left for the jury to decide under the circumstances, whether his continuance to perform the work should, under the circumstances, be held to be a voluntary assumption of the risks, or whether by, for instance, the promise of the master, he was entitled to continue a reasonable time still exposed to the danger, and yet not relieve the master from his liability for the increased risk, I have already fully charged on that doctrine." It is complained in the eighteenth exception that the request contained a sound proposition of law and should have been charged without modification, and that "the modification gave the jury an incorrect idea of the difference between assumption of risks and waiver, of defects and waiver." The twentieth exception is as follows: "Twentieth. Because it was error in his Honor to charge the jury as follows: `But if the testimony shows under all the circumstances that while he did continue to work exposed to this increased risk or danger, he did complain of this increased risk or danger to the master, had asked for means to lessen or remove the increased risk or danger, and had been promised by his master that such would be done, if he continues to work after that promise, it is then a question for the jury, judging by the length of time under all the circumstances that he continues to work, whether or not by thus continuing, he has assumed the risk, or is still entitled to ask and hold the master liable. That is a question for the jury to determine under the circumstances shown by the testimony, whether the master by promising to remove the danger has assumed the risk and liability following, or whether the servant by continuing too long without the danger being removed, continues the work, has thereby assumed the increased risk of danger,' the error being, it is submitted: (a) In wholly failing to distinguish and instruct the jury as to the radical difference between the *477
defense of contributory negligence and assumption of risk. (b) In entirely withdrawing from the jury and eliminating from the case the defense of assumption of risk. (c) In charging incorrectly the law applicable to assumption of risk." The sentence immediately preceding the portion of the charge above excepted to was as follows: "* * * I repeat, that a railway servant, while he assumes the ordinary risks incident to the kind of work that he is engaged to do, does not assume the risks or dangers to which he may be exposed by unsafe or unsuitable or insufficient means and appliances for doing the work required of him, but while that be so, still he may without complaining of such added risk and danger continue to work after he has discovered the increased risk or danger, he may do this voluntarily, and he may be injured as the direct result of this increased risk or danger, and if so, he would be held to have waived his right to hold his master liable, he would be held to have assumed the increased risk of danger, and the master could not be held liable." The charge to the jury was to that effect, that if a railway employee after knowledge of an extraordinary risk remains in the employer's service without complaint on his part and promise of amendment by the employer, he is held, as matter of law, to have assumed the risk, and cannot recover for an injury directly resulting therefrom; but if complaint be made and there is promise of removal, and the employee while remaining thereafter a reasonable time in the employer's service is injured, then it is for the jury to determine whether the employee by remaining in the employer's service assumed such risk. If it be conceded that this case is one in which it was proper to submit to the jury the question of assumption of risk by an employee, the charge was more favorable for the appellant than the law justifies. In Mew v. Railway Company,
But we will now attempt to show that the doctrine of "assumption of risk" has no application to this case, and by having it submitted to the jury, appellant received favor instead of prejudice. We think that art. IX., sec. 15, of the Constitution, sweeps away the defense of "assumption of risk" in all cases falling within its provisions. We quote the section in full, as follows: "Sec. 15. Every employee of any railroad corporation shall have the same rights and remedies for any injury suffered by him from the acts or omissions of said corporation or its employees as are allowed by law to other persons not employees, when the injury results from the negligence of a superior agent or officer, or of a person having a right to control or direct the services of a party injured, and also when the injury results from the negligence of a fellow-servant engaged in another department of labor from that of the party injured, or of a fellow-servant on another train of cars, or one engaged about a different piece of work. Knowledge by any employee injuredof the defective or unsafe character or condition ofany machinery, ways or appliances, shall be no defense to *480 an action for injury caused thereby, except as to conductorsor engineers in charge of dangerous or unsafe cars orengines voluntarily operated by them. When death ensues from any injury to employees, the legal or personal representatives of the person injured shall have the same rights and remedies as are allowed by law to such representatives of other persons. Any contract or agreement expressed orimplied made by any employee to waive the benefit of thissection, shall be null and void; and this section shall not be construed to deprive any employee of a corporation, or his legal or personal representative, of any remedy or right that he now has by the law of the land. The General Assembly may extend the remedies herein provided for to any other class of employees." The Circuit Court charged the jury, we think correctly, that "the word appliances includes not only inanimate machinery and tools and apparatus, but also the living men or persons needed to operate the machinery." This view is supported in 3 Wood's Railway Law, p. 1478, and Johnson v. Ashland Water Co.,
6. Contributory negligence. The twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth, fifteenth and sixteenth exceptions assign error in the charge as to contributory negligence. The twelfth exception complains of the following portion of the charge: "A man may be careless and negligent of his receiving injury, and yet his negligence may not be contributory negligence. It may not be a direct cause or proximate, and if the injury was inflicted by the defendant without any direct help from the negligence of the plaintiff, then the defendant would still be liable; if the injury could have been avoided, in spite of the plaintiff's negligence, by the exercise of due care on the part of the defendant, then the defendant would be liable, because that would mean that the plaintiff's negligence did not contribute to the injury, because it was not a proximate or direct cause." The error assigned is that the Court thereby instructed the jury that the plaintiff could recover, though guilty of contributory negligence, if the defendant, by the exercise of due care, could have avoided the injury. The thirteenth exception complains of the same language as in effect instructing the jury that if the defendant could have avoided the injury by the exercise of due care, any negligence of the plaintiff in reference to the injury would not be a proximate or direct cause thereof so as to prevent his recovery. If the charge really bore the meaning attributed to it by the exceptions, it would unquestionably be reversible error, for the law is too well settled to need citation in support of it, that contributory negligence will always defeat plaintiff's recovery. But *482
an examination of the charge shows that it does not mean what appellant claims. The Court had previously instructed the jury by defining contributory negligence in the language of 7 Ency. Law, 371, 2 ed., approved in Cooper v.R.R.,
The seventh exception alleges error in charging the jury as to contributory negligence, that before they could find for *487 the defendant they must be sure that contributory negligence had been proven, thereby, in effect, calling for a higher degree of proof that the law requires. We do not think the exception is well taken. The burden was upon defendant to establish the defense of contributory negligence to the satisfaction of the jury, and that is all that the charge can be fairly construed to mean, especially in view of other portions of the charge, wherein the jury were plainly instructed that in determining the issues, they were to be guided by the greater weight or preponderance of the evidence.
We notice finally the tenth and seventeenth exceptions. The Court instructed the jury: "But if the evidence satisfies you that he (plaintiff) was using the force to do the work required of him in the usual, customary way, then I charge you that he was not required as section foreman and railway servant to find out if there was another safer way, because he is simply required to use ordinary care, and the man who does ordinary work in the ordinary way, in the usual manner, the customary manner, can hardly be held guilty, of negligence." Defendant's ninth request to charge and the Court's response thereto is as follows: "9. If the jury believe that the force of hands furnished to the plaintiff was sufficient and safe for doing the work in hand in a different way from that which he adopted, then the plaintiff cannot recover, if the evidence shows that his injury resulted from his use of the force for the work in a more dangerous way, unless the evidence also shows that he was directed or required by his employer to adopt such more hazardous way." In response to this request the Court said: "I charge you that, with the modification that if he was doing the work in the usual, ordinary way, the customary way, he was not required to look out for another way." It is excepted that the foregoing charge was erroneous, (1) in charging on the facts, in violation of the Constitution; (2) in instructing the jury, in effect, that negligence is negatived if ordinary work is done in the usual, *488
customary manner. We think the charge was erroneous as alleged. Ordinary care, as already approved, is that care which a person of ordinary intelligence and prudence should exercise under the circumstances. The charge made the usual, customary way of doing things a conclusive test, whether due care is exercised therein, whereas that is merely evidence which should go to the jury along with the other evidence, leaving the jury to determine from all the evidence whether due care was observed. The usual, customary way, may not be a negligent way, but in this the Court left the jury no discretion but to find that plaintiff was not negligent, if he was doing the work in the usual, customary way. In the case of Bridger v. R.R. Co.,
The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed and the case remanded for a new trial. *490