55 S.E. 125 | S.C. | 1904
August 16, 1904. The opinion of the Court was delivered by *103 The plaintiff, a laborer in the defendant's employment, was injured by the falling of a battle-post which he was assisting to raise and place in position as a part of the bench of a bridge by means of a jim-pole. The allegation of negligence under which plaintiff obtained judgment was that the jim-pole to which was attached the blocks and tackle used to raise the battle-post, was not braced or made secure by guys at the bottom, and consequently under the strain applied more on one side than the other it slipped at the bottom, causing the battle-post and jim-pole both to fall.
The first exception charges error in this instruction to the jury: "The servant is not required by law to see whether the machinery, tools and appliances furnished are suitable and safe, for he has a right to rely on the presumption that the master will do his duty; and when it is made to appear that a servant was injured by reason of the machinery and appliances furnished by the master, it is primafacie evidence of negligence on the part of the master, and the burden is then thrown upon the master to show that he used due care and diligence in keeping in repair the machinery or appliances in question."
The principle is well established that proof of injury to the servant from the failure of the machinery or appliances furnished by the master does not raise the presumption of negligence by the master. Green v. Ry. Co.,
The plaintiff's contention that the error was harmless because the proof of negligence was overwhelming, with *104 practically no evidence to the contrary, cannot be sustained, for there was evidence that it was not usual to brace the jim-pole at the bottom as the plaintiff contended it should have been braced, for the reason that the weight on the pole would usually sink it deep enough in the ground to hold it fast without braces; and this was sufficient to raise an issue for the jury as to whether the apparatus and appliances furnished by the master were reasonably safe.
The second exception charges error in this instruction to the jury: "If you find for the plaintiff, then you can take into consideration these elements of damages * * * his physical and mental pain and suffering, and that which he is liable to endure in the future by reason of his injury."
The word liable in such a connection signifies something that might happen without importing reasonable certainty that it would happen, and, therefore, the charge indicated, the jury might enter into the field of conjecture as to possible future suffering and injury. The instruction in such cases should be that the verdict may include not future damages which the plaintiff is liable to suffer, that is, may suffer, but such damages as it is reasonably certain will of necessity result in the future from the injury. Ayres v. Del. c. Co.,
It is the judgment of this Court, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial. *105