Thе South Carolina Department of Highways (Highway Department) appeals from a jury verdict in favor of Isaac Howard arising from the collision of Howard’s logging truck with a Highway Department lawn-mowing tractor. We affirm. 1
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Isaac Howard, a veteran truck driver, was hauling a load of freshly harvested timber to a lumber mill on May 5, 1995, when he saw a Highway Department tractor with a rear mounted mowing machine cutting grass along the right-hand side of the road directly ahead of him. Both vehicles were *152 traveling in the same direction towards a roadway bridge. Howard noticed that a portion of the mowing deck extended onto the paved surface of his lane so he moved to the left in order to pass the tractor without striking the mowing deck. Just as Howard began to overtake the tractor, it abruptly swerved from the shoulder into his lane and proceeded across the bridge. Although Howard applied his brakes and moved comрletely into the opposite lane of travel, the bridge was not wide enough to allow Howard to pass the tractor without striking the rear of the mower deck. The accident severely injured Howard and caused extensive damage to his truck.
Although Howard admits to seeing the tractor as it approached the bridge, he maintains that he thought it would remain off to the side of the road until he passed, then it would raise its mowing deck and cross the bridge. “I’ve seen plenty times when [Highway Department tractors] get to bridges and stuff like that, they stop, they [raise their mowing decks], and they proceed on the other side of the road, going down the road, but they don’t leave [the mowing deck] down and cross out there in front of somebody....”
Fred Wright Jr. operated the tractor for the Highway Department. He testified that on the day in question, he was cutting grass along the side of the roadway when he approached the bridge. Wright maintаins he looked over his shoulder twice before easing onto the roadway so that he could cross the bridge. “When I got halfway across the bridge, I hear a horn. I could tell it was a big truсk behind me. I was too scared to look back so I just grabbed hold of the wheel and was waiting for the impact.”
The jury returned a verdict in favor of Howard in the amount of $193,445 in actual damages. This appeal followed.
LAW/ANALYSIS
The Highway Department’s Statutory Exemption
The Highway Department argues the trial court erred by allowing the jury to decide its negligence because S.C.Code Ann. § 56-5-800 “place[s] the burden on the motoring public to avoid persons who are engaged in work upon a highway” and exempts Highway Department vehicles and personnel *153 from the “statutory requirements for yielding the right-of-wаy, entering a roadway and other standard traffic laws” while “engaged in work upon a highway.” Specifically, the Highway Department maintains that it “and Mr. Wright owed no duty to keep a proрer lookout or other traffic duties,” and, therefore, they could not be found negligent in causing the accident. We disagree.
Section 56-5-800 states, in pertinent part, that certain provisions of the Uniform Act Regulating Traffic on Highways “shall not apply to persons, motor vehicles and other equipment while actually engaged in work upon a highway .... ” While this statute has nеver been interpreted by a court of this State, its predecessor, § 46-290, Code of Laws 1962, was interpreted.
2
Our supreme court held that, by operation of § 46-290, the operator of a Highway Department motor grader “violated no statutory duty by stopping it in the north bound lane of travel and,
under the facts which have been stated,
no reasonable inference of negligence arises therefrom.”
Taylor v. South Carolina State Highway Dep’t,
The Taylor holding encompasses two distinct propositions. First, the court found that the Highway Dеpartment’s grader did not violate the statutory prohibition against “stopping or parking a vehicle on the main traveled part of a highway” because § 46-290 exempts Department personnel and machinery from that prohibition while they are engaged in road work, as was the case with the grader. Secondly, the Court determined the grader’s operator wаs not negligent under the circumstances of the case. The second proposition demonstrates that the court reviewed the record for actionable negligencе on the part of the Highway Department despite its exemption from statutory traffic duties. It is not a pro *154 nouncement that the Highway Department owes no duty, statutory or otherwise, to the motoring public when engaged in work on a road. Taylor merely stands for the proposition that the duty owed by the Highway Department to the motoring public must be determined outside of the сontext of the traffic duties codified in certain sections of the Uniform Act Regulating Traffic on Highways. 3
Ordinarily, the violation of a traffic statute establishes the
per se
negligence of the offending driver.
Wise v. Broadway,
Even if we were to find the trial court erred by not charging the specific language оf § 56-5-800, the error would be harmless as the court’s instructions encapsulated the content of § 56-5-800 and there is nothing in the record to suggest that omitting the statutory language affected the verdiсt.
See Keaton v. Greenville Hosp. Sys.,
Assumption of Risk
The Highway Dеpartment argues the trial court erred by failing to charge the jury on assumption of risk because Howard admitted to seeing the Highway Department’s tractor working along the side of thе road before he collided with it! We disagree.
Assumption of risk is an affirmative defense.
4
Creighton v. Coligny Plaza Ltd. Partnership,
Burden Shifting
Finally, the Highway Department argues the trial court’s jury instruction impermissibly shifted the burden of proof from the plaintiff to the defendant because the court “spent substantial time [charging] the jury in this matter telling them that if it was not safe for Mr. Wright to have pulled out onto the bridge when he did, then Mr. Wright was negligent.”
We will not reverse a trial court’s instruction to a jury unless the court has abused its discretion.
Dalon v. Golden Lanes, Inc.,
In order to sustain an action for negligence, the plaintiff must demonstrate that the defendant breached a duty of care he or she owed to the plaintiff.
Steinke,
*157 For the aforementioned reasons, the decision of the trial courtis
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Because oral argument would not aid the court in resolving the issues on appeal, we decidе this case without oral argument pursuant to Rule 215, SCACR.
. Textually, the two statutes are very similar. Compare S.C. Code Ann. § 56-5-800 (1976) ([T]he provisions of this chapter ... shall not apply to persons, motor vehicles and other equipment while actually engаged in work upon a highway but shall apply to such persons and vehicles when traveling to or from such work.), with § 46-290, Code of Laws 1962 ("The provisions of this chapter shall not apply to persons, teams, motor vehicles and other equipment while actually engaged in work upon the surface of a highway, but shall apply to such persons and vehicles when traveling to or from such work.”).
. The other case relied on by the Highway Department,
Truesdale v. South Carolina Highway Dep’t,
. Although assumption of the risk is no longer recognized as a complete defense in a negligence action, it remains a facet of comparative negligence which may be charged to the jury.
Davenport v. Cotton Hope Plantation Regime,
