5 Ga. App. 142 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1908
(After stating the facts as above.)
The amendment states that the necessary third man was called away after the three were already in the very act of carrying the ladle full of hot molten iron. This presented an emergency. It puts the ease where we can not say that the plaintiff, under his duty to his employer, or under that duty to use ordinary care and diligence for self-protection which the law imposes on every man
It is well recognized now that one of the non-delegable duties of the master is to furnish an adequacy of competent fellow servants to do the work in hand. Labatt, Master and Servant, §573; Cheeney v. Ocean Steamship Co., 92 Ga. 726, 728 (19 S. E. 33, 44 Am. St. R. 113); S., F. & W. Ry. Co. v. Goss, 80 Ga. 524 (5 S. E. 777); Moore v. Dublin Mills, 127 Ga. 610 (56 S. E. 839, 10 L. R. A. (N. S.) 772); Dennis v. Schofield, 1 Ga. App. 487 (57 S. E. 925). The petition alleges such a delinquency on the part of the master as an efficient proximate cause of the injury; and, therefore, the case turns upon the question whether the risk was assumed by the servant and whether he was guilty of contributory negligence.
The relation of master and servant arises through a contract
The contract of employment being one of mutual benefits, the-servant’s assent and consent to work with a defective instrumentality of his master gives the transaction very much the same color as if the servant were expected to use one of his own tools — as is sometimes the case, and he himself should bring one that is defective. Let us get clearly fixed in our minds just here the idea, that the subject-matter of the contract between the parties (the doing of the work in contemplation) 'is one in which the servant has a proprietorship, so to speak, as well as the master; he is engaged in the business of laboring, just as the master is engaged in the business of having labor done; the master’s plant, tools, etc., are instrumentalities which he (the servant) adopts and contracts for as a part of the occupation he wishes to carry on — the occupation of working for reward. If he were working for himself and not for a master, he would have the legal right to buy defective tools or use an unsafe workshop of his own. So, too, he has the similar legal right to make a contract to work for his master in which he under
The action of the servant against the master for injuries received through defects in the latter’s work, ways, means, instrumentalities, etc., however, almost invariably sounds in tort. It is-elementary that a broken duty arising from a relation created by contract may furnish the basis for an action ex delicto. See Civil. Code, §3807, par. 3, §3810; L. & N. R. Co. v. Spinks, 104 Ga. 692 (30 S. E. 968). In such cases the contract tends to assist in defining the duty, and frequently limits it or the right to sue for a. breach of it, when otherwise there would be no such limit. This principle, that a right of action ex delicto because of the breach of .a duty springing from a contractual relationship is subjected to the terms of the contract, is familiar. For example, when a member of the public makes with a telegraph company a contract for the transmission of a message, a relationship arises between the parties and a public duty on the company’s part attaches to-the transaction; and for the breach of this duty a cause of action ex delicto exists, but it may be modified or defeated by the terms-of the underlying contract; as, for instance, by the usual stipulation that immediate notice of the damages shall be given, and that-no suit shall be brought except within a limited period of time.
The prime gist of the servant’s action against the master is very much akin to that in cases where an invited visitor comes upon the premises of another. “The duty of a master to use ordinary care to keep his premises and to conduct his business in such manner that his servants may perform their duties in safety is but a. phase of the broader and more anciently-recognized doctrine of the common law that every person who expressly or impliedly invites another to come upon his premises or to use his instrumentalities is bound to use ordinary care to protect the invited person from injury.” Seaboard Air-Line Railway v. Chapman, 4 Ga. App. 706 (62 S. E. 488). The law implies an invitation from the-landowner to come upon his premises, as to every one with whom he has such business relations as to warrant such an implication. Mandeville Mills v. Dale, 2 Ga. App. 607 (58 S. E. 1060). We-