183 N.C. 450 | N.C. | 1922
The complaint states four phases of the defendant’s alleged negligence, but at the trial the plaintiff relied mainly on the asserted negligent failure to provide for him a suitable drill and a safe place in which to work. After the plaintiff’s witnesses had testified, the defendant, declining to offer evidence, made a motion to dismiss the action as in case of nonsuit. In support of the motion it now insists (1) that the injury was an accident; (2) that even if the general rule prescribing the employer’s duty as to furnishing implements applies where the tools are of simple construction, still, granting the defendant’s negligence in the respects complained of, there was no proximate causal relation between such negligence and the plaintiff’s injury; and (3) that 'the plaintiff, disregarding the safe way of driving back the drill, chose the dangerous way by using a hammer for that purpose.
The master is not an insurer of the servant’s safety, but he is required to exercise ordinary care to provide reasonably safe instrumentalities wherewith, and reasonably safe places wherein, the servant shall do his work. In the discharge of this duty he meets the requirements of the law if he exercises that degree of care which a man of ordinary prudence would exercise having regard to his own safety, if he were providing such appliances or places for his own personal use. Marks v. Cotton Mills, 135 N. C., 290; Nail v. Brown, 150 N. C., 535; Mercer v. R. R., 154 N. C., 401. In Mercer’s case, supra, Allen, J., said: “This duty applies alike to the simple and the complicated tools, but the authorities agree that after performing this duty, the law does not impose the same obligations with reference to the two classes of tools. When the tools and appliances are complicated, the employer must inspect them from time to time, and must see that they are maintained in a reasonably safe condition.” Fearington v. Tobacco Co., 141 N. C., 83. With reference to simple tools, the question of the employer’s responsibility may generally be referred to his actual or constructive knowledge of defects from which injury may reasonably be expected to result. This principle has been frequently applied; as, for example, where the employer had provided a hammer that was not suitable for the work entrusted to the employee (Young v. Fiber Co., 159 N. C., 376); where a pin intended to secure a wheel on the spindle of a truck had been materially worn by long use (Cotton v. R. R., 149 N. C., 227); where a ladder used to clean out a vat had become worn and defective (Reid v. Rees, 155 N. C., 231); and where a defective chisel had been furnished for cutting slack rivets from an oil tank (Mercer v. R. R., supra). That there had been, in some of these cases, an opportunity for inspection is unimportant, for
The defendant contends, however, that the hurt inflicted could not have been foreseen, that it was an accident, and that there was no causal relation between the alleged negligence and the plaintiff’s injury. As we have said, there was evidence tending to show that the defendant negligently furnished a defective drill, and that the plaintiff, in obedience to instructions attempted to “knock it back through the boards or wood, . . . whereupon a piece flew off the drill and hit him in the left eye.” The defendant says that the plaintiff only assumed that the particle of steel came from the drill; but the jury found it to be a fact. The defendant says that the proximate cause of the injury was the plaintiff’s negligent use of the hammer; but this was a matter for the consideration of the jury. The principle discussed in Martin v. Mfg. Co., 128 N. C., 264, is not applicable where the employer has actual or constructive knowledge that the defect in a simple tool which he provides is of a kind importing menace of substantial injury (Thompson v. Oil Co., supra); and where there is evidence of concurring negligence on the part of the plaintiff and of the defendant the question of proximate cause must ordinarily be referred to the jury. True it is that where the danger is obvious and the servant has as good an opportunity as the master of seeing the danger, and can avoid it by the exercise of reasonable care, the servant cannot recover against the master for injuries received in consequence of conditions which constituted the danger. Labatt on Master and Servant, sec. 333; Mincey v. R. R., supra. But upon the evidence here we cannot hold as a conclusion of law that the alleged negligence of the plaintiff was the proximate cause of his injury. Isaiah Miles testified that the drills in general and approved use for work in concrete were made of octagon and tool steel; that the drill furnished the plaintiff was made of reenforcing steel, or scrap metal, and was more easily battered than one made from octagon steel — “if you hit it on the end it is going to break somewhere.” And Costner said that after he had sharpened the drill its point was scaly and blue. The plain
In view of wbat bas been said, it is unnecessary to refer to tbe defendant’s request for a peremptory instruction upon tbe second and third issues beyond saying that each of them embraced elements that were determinable only by tbe jury, and tbe defendant’s prayer for tbe further instruction that it was tbe duty of tbe plaintiff to inspect tbe drill omits all reference to tbe exercise of due care, and, when considered in connection with tbe plaintiff’s right to assume that tbe defendant bad performed its duty, it was properly declined. Nor can we concur in tbe contention that tbe defendant was prejudiced by bis Honor’s observation that “a plaintiff may be guilty of contributory negligence and yet that negligence would not be tbe proximate cause of tbe injury.” The word “contributory” was inadvertently used by bis Honor in defining “proximate cause,” and not in bis instructions upon tbe second issue; and to conclude that tbe jury were misled would be practically equivalent to an abolition of tbe established rule that instructions to the jury must be considered in their entirety. Maney v. Greenwood, 182 N. C., 583; In re Hinton’s Will, 180 N. C., 206. Tbe necessity of.adhering to this rule is apparent when we consider tbe specific instruction that tbe plaintiff could not recover if bis negligence proximately caused or contributed to bis hurt.
Tbe seventh and eighth -exceptions are addressed to tbe following instruction: “Now tbe law says, gentlemen, that it is tbe duty of tbe master, if be employs a servant, to furnish him a reasonably safe place to work, and if be does not, and tbe plaintiff is injured by tbe failure, by reason of tbe master failing to furnish tbe servant a reasonably safe place to work, or tbe employee a safe place to work, and if such failure is tbe proximate cause of bis injury, then tbe law says be can recover if tbe defendant, tbe employer, was guilty of negligence. Tbe law also says that it is tbe duty of tbe master to furnish tbe servant with reasonably safe tools and appliances with which to do tbe work, and, as a general rule, if he does not and be is injured by reason of bis failure to furnish him reasonably safe tools and appliances to work with, if be is injured, tbe law says tbe party can recover.” We think these exceptions should be sustained. In Bailey’s Law of Personal Injuries (2 ed.), sec. 162, tbe character and extent of tbe master’s duty are defined as follows: “Tbe underlying doctrine of the master’s duty towards bis servant, with respect to tbe character of tbe appliances furnished and place of work, as well as other duties that rest upon him, is that of tbe
Let this be certified to the end that the matters in controversy may be submitted to another jury.
New trial.
Stacy, J., concurs in the result reached by a majority of the Court, that the verdict and judgment rendered herein should not be allowed to stand; and further, is of the opinion that the defendant’s motion for judgment as of nonsuit should have been allowed.
The plaintiff was an experienced carpenter. He undertook to drive the drill back by going underneath the floor and striking it on the sharp end with a steel hammer; and this without using a block of wood to soften the impact, or without taking any precaution for his own safety or for the protection and preservation of the tools he was using. Can there be any doubt but what this act of carelessness on his part was the proximate cause of the injury? Thompson v. Construction Co., 160 N. C., 390; Wright v. R. R., 155 N. C., 325.