120 S.E. 342 | N.C. | 1923
Civil action to recover damages for an alleged negligent injury sustained by the plaintiff, an employee of the defendant, on 24 June, 192, while working on an "edger" in the sawmill plant of the defendant company.
From a verdict establishing liability, and judgment thereon, the defendant appeals, assigning errors. Defendant assigns as error the following excerpt from the charge: "Where the relationship of master and servant, employer and employee, is established, then the master or employer owes to the employee certain duties, to provide him with reasonably suitable tools and appliances with which to perform the work assigned, and likewise to provide him with a reasonably safe place in which to do the labor assigned."
This instruction is in direct conflict with what was said in Owen v.Lbr. Co.,
It is not the absolute duty of the master to provide for his servant a reasonably safe place to work and to furnish him reasonably safe appliances with which to execute the work assigned — such would practically render the master an insurer in every hazardous employment — but it is his duty to do these things in the exercise of ordinary care. Owen v.Lbr. Co., supra. This limitation on the master's duty is not a mere play on words, nor a distinction without a difference, but it constitutes a substantial fact, or circumstance, affecting the rights of the parties.Tritt v. Lbr. Co., supra.
In the case at bar, the plaintiff's evidence — there was none offered by the defendant — shows a clear case of culpable negligence. In the opening part of the charge the court used the following language, to which there was no objection or exception: "The defendants, through their counsel, concede in their argument that if the evidence be found to be true, that it discloses negligence upon the part of the defendants." It was further conceded on the trial that no evidence had been elicited tending to show any contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff, though this plea was set up in the defendant's answer, and for this *748 reason no issue as to contributory negligence was submitted to the jury. This error in the charge was therefore harmless and the exception must be overruled.
The defendant also excepts and assigns as error the following instruction on the issue of damages: "Where one is injured by the negligent acts of another, actionable in their nature, then the injured party is entitled to be awarded and to recover such an amount as will reasonably compensate him for loss sustained — past, present and in the future, or prospective. Such losses may embrace actual expensively of medical care and attention, such as are expended for nurse's services; they likewise may include the diminution or impairing of the ability of the injured person to perform labor, either mental or physical; and likewise they may include such sufferings of mind and body as are injuries sustained. Such are the elements of damage recognized by the law."
The vice of this instruction, according to defendant's contention, is that it fails to limit plaintiff's recovery for future losses to a sum equal to their present cash value or present worth. Defendant's position in regard to limiting the damages, if any, which may accrue in the future to the present cash value or present worth of such damages is undoubtedly the correct one, for if the jury assess any prospective damages, the plaintiff is to be paid now, in advance, for future losses. The sum fixed by the jury should be such as fairly compensates the plaintiff for injuries suffered in the past and those likely to occur in the future. The verdict should be rendered on the basis of a cash settlement of the plaintiff's injuries, past, present and prospective. Ledford v. Lbr. Co.,
But we do not think this rule or principle was altogether ignored in the charge, though it was not stated as fully as it might have been. Speaking to a similar question and to a similar instruction in Hill v. R. R.,
"If the defendant desired it to be stated more fully, or in any special way, he should himself have asked for an instruction sufficient to present his view, or so as to direct the attention and consideration of the jury more pointedly to the rule of damages. Simmons v. Davenport,
Viewing the record in its entirely, we have discovered no sufficient reason for disturbing the result of the trial. The verdict and judgment will be upheld.
No error.