— after stating the facts: Where a servant rests his claim to damages against 'his employer upon the ground that he has been injured by defective machinery, furnished by the master to be used in the course of his employment, the burden is cast upon him, as plaintiff, to prove negligence prima facie, or subject himself to judgment of non-suit. It is a well settled rule that he cannot relieve himself of the onus thus imposed upon him until he offers testimony tending to shоw:
1. That the appliance or machinery was defective.
2. That the injury was due to such defect as the proximate cause.
3. That the attention of the master had been called to the defect, or that, in the exercise of a degree of care, сommensurate with the character of the machine, he ought
*501
to have had knowledge of it. Thompson on Neg., p. 996, §12;
ibid.,
p. 984, §11 (2);
Gibson
v.
The R. R Co.,
Some writers, who are generally recognized as authority, contend that the servant is required to show affirmatively, also, that he did not know of the fault in the machinery to which the injury was due, and that it was not so apparent that he could, with ordinary observation, have discovered it. 3 Hard. R. L. Cases, § 385; Woods’ Law of M. & S., §382; Beach on Con. Neg., §123. The weight of authority, as well,as the force of sound reasoning, sustain the rule, however, that it is incumbent on the defendant — if it would avoid liability for injuries caused by machinery furnished to. the servant, when its agents knew, or ought to have known, of its dangеrouá*condition — to aver in the answer, and to prove on the trial, that the latter, knew when he entered the_ service, or discovered during the term of service and before he was injured, or by the exerсise of ordinary observation or reasonable skill and diligence in his department of service, might have known that the appliance complained, of was unsafe. 2 Thomp. on Neg., p. 1008, §15; Onus Probandi, 127, 128; Greenleaf v. Illinois Central Railroad Co., 29, Iowa, 14. In. Shearman & Redfield on Negligence (§,99) the rule as to the onus probandi, .in cases of this kind, is stated as follows: “In actions brought .by servants, against their masters,.the bjirden of proof, as to the master’s knowledge, or culpability, in lacking . knowledge, of the, defect which led to the injury, whether in the character of a fellow-servant or the. quality of the material used, rests qpon the plaintiff.. But the plaintiff, having proved the fault of the. master in this respect,, the burden of. proving that the plaintiff also knew of .such .defеct, and commenced, or con-, tinued, his service, with such knowledge, rests upon the defendant. This fact being proved, it is then for the plain *502 tiff to show, if he can, that the defendant induced him to continue his work by prоmising to remedy the defect.”
While a, servant, in contemplation of law, contracts with reference to the danger of injury from fellow-servants in a common employment, and to the peril incident to the use of unsafe appliances, to which his attention is called before contracting, yet, if he first discovers this dangerous condition, after accepting employment,- and wilfully continues to incur- the risk inсident to the service, such voluntary exposure of his person is held to be contributory negligence on his part, and he is held not to be entitled to recover damages for an inj ury due to such defects, because of his own carelessness, and not on the ground that he agreed to sub-' ject himself to hazards of which he could not have known. Patterson R.
&
L., § 327; Wharton on Negligence, §197;
Pleasants
v.
Railroad Co.,
The second point decided was, that if the complaint contained a defective statement of a cause of action, the defendant had averred in his answer, first, that the еngine had been repaired and was in good condition; and, second, that if it was unsafe, when it exploded, it became so after it was repaired and inspected, “ without the knowledge thereof on thе part of the defendant,” and the defects were cured under the rule as to aider.
In the case of
Cowles
v.
R. R. Co.,
It is not essential that we should consider any. of the other errors assigned, but as the case may come before us again it is best to advert to two other exceрtions. We think there was no error in refusing to charge, as requested, that there was no exidence that the engine was unsafe or defective, or that the injury was caused by. the dangerous condition of the engine. The testimony of the witnesses Hudson, Ferguson, Huske, Jackson and Sullivan tended to show that the engine was in a dangerous condition ; and that' of Bard, Bynum, Murray and Hudson that'the injury might have been "due to the fact that it'was not subject to'the control of the engineer. It is not within oür-province-to pass upon the weight of' the evidence. We only decide ■ that it was sufficient to require .the"Court to'submit 'the base -terthe jury. There was error in ’the instruction n's to the burden of proof, for .which them must be a new-trial.
]£rror.
