16 Ga. App. 53 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1915
Alonzo Hampton brought suit in the city court of Macon against the Cherokee Brick Company, a corporation, for $5,000 damages on account of the loss of his left hand and other injuries alleged to have been caused by the explosion of a muzzle-loading shotgun which he was instructed by the defendant’s superintendent to discharge into one of the brick-kilns of its plant. The discharge of the gun into the kilns was for the purpose of expelling accumulations of soot from the kiln. The plaintiff himself testified that he was unfamiliar with guns of the muzzle-loading type, and had not used this particular gun before that day; that after he had loaded the gun, and the superintendent had rammed down the wadding, he protested to the superintendent of the company that the gun was unsafe, and that he was afraid to discharge it; that the superintendent assured him the gun was safe, and insisted upon his firing it into one of the kilns, the door of which was opened for that purpose by the superintendent, and when he discharged it the barrel eiploded, blowing away his left hand. The evidence is in conflict upon some of the material points, but the jury, by their verdict, gave preference to the testimony in favor of the plaintiff, and returned a verdict for $2,500 in his favor.
1. Giving the testimony for the plaintiff, as we must, the preference accorded to it by the jury, it can not be said that the verdict is contrary to law or evidence; and a review of the various special assignments of error presented by the record satisfies us that the trial judge committed no error in overruling the motion for a new trial. In its answer to the plaintiff’s petition, the defendant admitted that he received the injuries and suffered pain as alleged, and that he was in its employ, but all the charges of negligence were denied. The gist of the defense, as stated by the learned counsel
2. It is insisted, however, that the danger was so manifest that the act of the plaintiff in discharging the gun, although in obedience to the commands of the alter ego of the defendant, amounted to rashness, and for this reason he can not recover. Of course, the servant can not justify his taking the risk of an obvious danger or excuse gross negligence on the ground that he acted in obedience to his master’s command, because his first duty is to exercise due care — the care of an ordinarily prudent man — for his own safety; but the jury had before it not only proof of the order to the servant to discharge the gun, and the fact that this was the customary method of removing soot from the defendant’s brick-kilns, but also the fact that this gun was supplied by the master, whose absolute duty it was to furnish safe instrumentalities. It did not appear that the servant had equal opportunity with the master to know that the gun was defective, for he had never seen a gun like it, and the master himself loaded the gun. So really all that the plaintiff did was to overcome what, under the circumstances of the ease, had the master properly loaded the gun and had the gun itself not been
3. Learned counsel for the plaintiff in error insist that the plaintiff was bound to know that the gun was overloaded, and that, therefore, in shooting the gun he incurred a risk and incident injury notwithstanding any negligence of which the superintendent might have been guilty in requiring him to shoot it, and that, under the circumstances, the plaintiff was manifestly guilty of greater negligence in shooting the gun than the defendant’s superintendent was in requiring him to shoot it. We have already referred to evidence which authorized the jury to find that the superintendent, and not the plaintiff, loaded the gun, and to the plaintiff’s testimony to the effect that he was absolutely ignorant of the quality and character of the.gun. But even if it be conceded that the plaintiff had reason to believe it was dangerous to discharge the gun, and even if the testimony to the effect that the gun was old and rusty was sufficient to impute to him knowledge of its defective and dangerous condition, that fact would not necessarily defeat his right to recover. This is especially true because it is undisputed that the defendant’s superintendent ordered him
It is to be borne in mind that “the servant does not stand on the same footing with the master. His primary duty is obedience, and if, when in the discharge of his duty, he is damaged through the neglect of the master it is but meet that he should be recompensed.” Patterson v. Pittsburg &c. R. Co., 76 Pa. 389 (18 Am. R. 412). The essential inequality in the position of the parties seems to warrant the deduction that “a prudent man has the right, within reasonable limits, to rely upon the ability and skill of the agent in whose charge the common master has placed him, and is not bound at his peril to set his own judgment above that of his superior.” Indiana Car Co. v. Parker, 100 Ind. 181. In other words, “When a servant did not assert his judgment in opposition to the supposed better judgment or stronger will of his master, the law usually allows a jury to determine whether he was negligent, or acted in reliance upon the judgment of his master, or out of a constrained acquiescense in the rule of obedience which his relation as servant imposed.” 4 Labatt’s Master & Servant (2d ed.), § 1364. Our own Supreme Court has held that the question whether obedience to an order apparently dangerous is negligence is one of fact for a jury. In Central R. Co. v. DeBray, 71 Ga. 406, it was ruled that negligence is not inferable as ’a matter of law where the evidence shows that a brakeman, who was injured by striking against a skid when complying with an order to dismount at night from a train moving at a rate of from four to six miles an hour, used his
4. Even a direct and immediate order on the part of the master will not justify a servant in rashly exposing himself to a known and obvious danger. But though the servant, at the time of the injury, may be performing a duty so dangerous as to involve the element of rashness, yet if this rash conduct is not a natural, proximate, and contributory cause of his being hurt, and the injuries are received by reason of an independent act on the master’s part, the mere fact of the servant’s being engaged in the rash conduct mentioned will not preclude his right of recovery. Southern Cotton Oil Co. v. Gladman, 1 Ga. App. 259 (6-7), 260 (58 S. E. 249). Granting that the plaintiff in the present ease was negligent in not using his faculties, or in miscalculating the danger of the risk, and conceding that if he had not pulled the trigger the gun would not have been fired, it is nevertheless plain to us that the direct, proximate, contributing cause of the plaintiff’s injury was the superintendent’s order to him to shoot. Whether this be true or not, the servant had the right to assume that the master’s representative, who presumably had superior knowledge of the conditions, would not expose him to unnecessary peril, and an order of the master having the natural tendency to throw the servant off his guard may properly be considered to excuse him from the exercise of the same degree of care as would have been incumbent on him if the case had not involved this factor. Obedience to an order is not contributory negligence in any case in which the servant has the right to assume that the master will warn him as to any danger which the service may involve; and where the servant is entitled to assume that he is ordered to put himself in a dangerous position because his duty requires it, it will be for the jury to say, upon a review of all the circumstances, whether the plaintiff was guilty of negligence.
5. A specific order to do a certain act carries with it an implied
6-8. The other questions presented are sufficiently dealt with in the headnotes. The evidence authorized the verdict, and there was no error in refusing a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.