51 S.C. 412 | S.C. | 1898
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The plaintiff, a little girl about nine years of age, brought this action to recover damages for certain injuries sustained by her, while employed as an operative in the cotton factory of defendant company, occasioned by the alleged negligence of said company. In her complaint, she alleges that, while employed as an operative upon certain spinning frames, she sustained the damages complained of, by reason of the fact that defendant had negligently provided for her use spinning frames without caps or other suitable appliances to cover the gearing thereof, by reason whereof her hand was caught in the gearing and injured in the manner stated in the complaint. It having appeared in the evidence that the plaintiff was not injured by the gearing of the frames at which she was put to work, but by the gearing of frames some nine or ten feet distant, at which another operative, Mary Green, was working, which she had to pass by in going to get assistance in taking up broken threads on her own frames; when she offered testimony tending to show that the frames at which Mary Green was working were supplied with defective gearing, such testimony was objected to, upon the ground that the defendant was called upon to answer for the defective gearing of the frames at which the plaintiff was put to work, and not for the defective gearing of the frames at which Mary Green was working. The objection was sustained, and counsel for plaintiff asked leave to amend his complaint, which was refused, upon the ground that “the amendment asked for would present an entirely new case.” The Court adding: “I would like to allow the amendment if I was authorized, but I am not, under the authorities.” The counsel for plaintiff then asked leave to withdraw the case from the jury, stating that he had been misled by the statement of the little girl, upon which he
In Clayton v. Mitchell, 31 S. C., 204, cited by counsel for respondent, the action was for the recovery of real estate, to which the only answer set up was a general denial, and it was held that the Circuit Judge erred in recommitting the report of the master, to whom it was referred to hear and determine all the issues, for the purpose of enabling the defendant to set up two additional affirmative defenses— the plea of res judicata and the statute of limitations. These amendments clearly changed, not only substantially
The judgment of this Court is that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed, and the case remanded to that Court for a new trial.