delivered the opinionf 1 of the court.
This case involves an important question of trial practice. It was an action brought by Fillippon, a citizen of Italy ánd a subject of the King of Italy, against the Slate Company, a Pennsylvania corporation, doing business in that State, to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by'plaintiff while in the employ of defendant, due as alleged to the negligence of defendant’s foreman or superintendent under whom plaintiff was working. The grounds of negligence alleged were the failure to furnish a reasonably safe place for the work, failure to warn plaintiff of latent dangers of the work and the dangerous method of doing it, and specifically that plaintiff was directed to do the work in a particular manner under orders and
The trial judge submitted the question of defendant’s negligence and of plaintiff’s contributory negligence to the jury, saying, in his principal charge, among other things: “When a man accepts employment he assumes also with it the ordinary risk incident to such employment, and if you find the circumstances or situation in which the plaintiff found himself at the time of the accident, or that his -performance leading up to the injury was of ordinary occurrence, then you may conclude that he had assumed the risk of the accident that has befallen him, and he cannot recover; but on his part it is contended that the situation in which he found himself at the time when the stone or slate block, properly speaking, was suspended or lifted by the men was of an extraordinary character, that the' plaintiff when about to place the iron wedge found the stone or block large, and threatening danger, as he believed, whereupon he was suddenly and hastily summoned and directed to act by the foreman, whereupon he had but little or no time to judge of his own safety, and yielding to the judgment of his superior hé acted. Now, if you find the facts as contended for by the plaintiff, I will ask you to say whether he was guilty of contributory negligence under the circumstances. Could he have protected or saved himself by the use or exercise of ordinary care? If he is to blame in part, or has in any manner contributed to his injury, he is not entitled to your verdict. The rule in negligence cases is, that while the defendant is held to exercise due and reasonable care under the circumstances, the plaintiff is also held to -exercise the same degree of care, and if. he does not do so, he cannot recover. Of course, if the master gives positive orders to go oh with the work, under perilous circumstances, the servant may recover for an injury thus incurred, if the work was not inevitably or. imminently dangerous. If the danger was
To this action of the court plaintiff excepted at the first opportunity upon grounds that raise two questions: (a) 'Whether it was erroneous to give this supplementary instruction in the absence of the parties and without calling the jury in open court, and (b) whether the instruction so given was erroneous.
- The jury having returned a verdict in favor of defendant, and a motion for a new trial having been denied, the resulting judgment was brought under the review of the Circuit Court of Appeals and there affirmed. 242 Fed. Rep. 258. Thereupon this writ of certiorari was allowed.
The Circuit Court of Appeals considered that the jury had asked a plain question in writing concerning a matter of law, and the judge had answered it in writing plainly and accurately, and were of the opinion that since nothing else had occurred — the question and answer having been preserved of record and counsel ^having been promptly notified of what had taken place and given the opportunity of excepting to, the substance of the instruction and to ¿he manner of giving it — no harm had been done, and none
It is not correct, however, to regard the opportunity of afterwards excepting to the instruction and to the manner of giving it as equivalént to an opportunity to be present during the proceedings. To so hold would be to overlook the primary and essential function of; an exception, which is to direct the mind of the trial judge to ■ the point in which it is supposed that hé has erred in law, so that he may reconsider it and change his ruling if cdnvinced of error, and that injustice and mistrials due to inadvertent errors may thus be obviated. United.
States
v.
U. S. Fidelity Co.,
And of course in jury trials erroneous rulings are presumptively injurious, especially those embodied in instructions to the jury; and they furnish ground for reversal unless it affirmatively appears that they were harmless.'
In this case,- so far from the supplementary instruction being harmless, in our opinion it was erroneous and calculated to mislead the jury in that it excluded a material element that needed to be considered in determining whether plaintiff should be held guilty of contributory negligence under the particular hypothesis referred to in the jury’s question.
The case was governed by the law of Pennsylvania, where the injury was received and the trial took place. Rev. Stats., § 721. The law of that State,- as it stood when the cause of action arose
1
is expressed in repeated decisions of its court of last resort tp the following effect: “Where the servant, in obedience'to the requirement of the master, incurs the risk of machinery, which though dangerous, is not so much so as to threaten immediate injury, or where it is reasonably probable it may be safely
In the present case the trial judge recognized this to be the applicable rule of law when orignally instructing the jury, for he said: “Of course, if the master gives positive orders to go on with the work, under perilous circum-, stances, the servant may recover for an injury thus incurred, if the work was not inevitably or imminently' dangerous.” But this was neutralized, and the jury probably led astray, when in the supplementary instruction .they were told, in effect, that if, when plaintiff obeyed the foreman’s order by putting the wedge beneath the heavy
The judgment under reviev: will be reversed, and the cause remanded to the District Court for further proceedings in conformity with this opinion.
Notes
See Workmen’s Compensation Act of 1915, Pa. Laws 1915, p. 736.
