96 S.E. 138 | S.C. | 1918
March 23, 1918. The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is the second appeal in this case. The first appeal is reported in
A reading of the evidence in the case shows that the plaintiff's evidence at this trial was practically the same as that at the trial that was appealed in the former case, and, that being the case, what was said in the case reported in
The facts for the former appeal in substance constitute the facts of the present appeal as far as the plaintiff's evidence is concerned, with the defendant's evidence impeaching and contradicting that of the plaintiff of the issues involved.
The first exception at a first glance looks as if his Honor was in error, and that the charge was prejudicial to the defendant in instructing the jury as to the duty of the master to an ignorant and inexperienced servant, and in the instruction that the defense of assumption of risk does not apply except where the servant has full knowledge of the dangers incident to his employment. The plaintiff should have, of course, availed himself of the knowledge and conditions before him. It was for the jury to determine whether he acted as one of ordinary prudence should act under similar circumstances, and not that he should have full knowledge of the danger. But, while his Honor was in error in so charging, he remedied and corrected that mistake later by charging the defendant's fourth and fifth requests, and the jury could not have been misled *347 by his Honor's charge to such an extent as to be prejudicial to the defendant and to such an extent as to work a reversal. The request complained of, considered in connection with the whole charge, is untenable.
The motion for a new trial was based solely on questions of fact; and, as defendant made neither a motion for nonsuit nor for a directed verdict, it is precluded from any relief by this Court based upon questions of fact.
This Court has a right in the orderly conduct of business to frame rules as to how the question of raising points shall be made, and the manner in which they are to be first made, and in so doing it is not a denial of right, but simply a question of practice, and inherently in the power of the Court to adopt.
All exceptions are overruled.
Judgment affirmed.