98 S.E. 142 | S.C. | 1919
February 1, 1919. The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is an action for damages for personal injury. It is the second action for the same injury. The first action was brought by Forest B. Newsom, a minor under 14 years of age, for the injury to himself, and is reported in
The evidence in the two cases is practically the same, and in the former case is stated:
"Forest Newsom, a boy between 13 and 14 years of age, was employed in appellant's mill as a sweeper. On the morning of the injury, he was sweeping, not only his own section, but the section of another sweeper, who was that day out of the mill.
"There is evidence to show that Mr. Whisnant was overseer of the section assigned to the absent sweeper; that after Newsom had finished his sweeping and was talking to another employee, Mr. Whisnant called him to get a bag and help in the cleaning of the machines in Mr. Whisnant's section. These machines were cleaned only at long intervals, not oftener than four times a year. Some of the operatives who had been in the mill for years said they had never seen them cleaned. In order to clean the machines an iron door was opened, exposing the gear, and a broom was put into the machine through the open door, and the loose cotton was swept from the machine through the door. The plaintiff was holding a bag at the open door to catch the refuse as it was swept from the machine." *428
"Mr. Whisnant was a new man in his position. He stopped the first two machines while he was cleaning them. He then, under the advice of another operative, undertook to clean the machines while they were in motion. After cleaning several moving machines, he left Newsom at an open door to close another door, and Newsom saw a piece of cotton inside of the machine and undertook to pick it up with his hand. Newsom's hand was caught and severely injured."
1. The first and second exceptions complained of error in the refusal of the presiding Judge to direct a verdict as to negligence and wilfulness. There was no error here. The reasons are fully stated in the former case, and need not be restated here.
2. The appellant's fundamental error is contained in its seventh exception, which complains of error in his Honor's failure to charge that the uncontradicted evidence showed that Forest Newsom was not put to work in cleaning moving machinery. The uncontradicted evidence shows that Forest Newsom was put to work in cleaning moving machinery. At the time of the injury Mr. Whisnant and Forest were together cleaning moving machinery. Mr. Whisnant was handling the broom, and Forest was placing the bag to catch the lint that Mr. Whisnant swept from the machine, and Forest was injured in catching the lint which Mr. Whisnant swept from the cogwheels. It was decided in the former case that this was in violation, not only of the rules of the company, but of the statute, and was negligence, and it was negligence as a matter of law.
3. The third exception complains that the trial Judge committed error in charging the jury that it is the duty of a servant to obey the orders of the master. As a general proposition, the charge is correct, and if the appellant desired further instruction, it should have requested it. The charge later qualified the statement.
4. The fourth exception complains of error in that his Honor erred in charging the jury that the master is held to *429 a stricter account to a servant of tender years than to an adult. There is no error there. The master is required to warn a servant of tender years of the dangers. The appellant's fourth request to charge admits the proposition. That request was: "(4) The master is bound to warn a servant only when the servant, on account of youth and inexperience, does not know the danger attending upon the work."
5. The fifth exception is: "He erred in charging plaintiff's tenth request as follows: `One of the nonassignable duties of the master is to furnish a safe place to work, and the master would be liable for any injury resulting to the servant from working in an unsafe place at the direction of any one authorized by the master, either directly or indirectly, to assign the servant to such a place of labor' — it being submitted that by said request the master is charged with liability, irrespective of the question of his negligence, and irrespective of the question as to whether the servant might not have assumed the risks involved."
This exception cannot be sustained. His Honor charged the jury that, if the danger was open and a person of ordinary prudence would have seen it, then blame was on the servant, and not on the master.
6. The next complaint was that his Honor erred in charging the jury that it was negligence per se to violate the rules of the company. The rules and the statute both for bid the employment of minors in cleaning moving machinery, and it has already been held that it was negligence as a matter of law.
The judgment is affirmed.
MESSRS. JUSTICES HYDRICK, WATTS and GAGE concur.
*430MR. CHIEF JUSTICE GARY did not sit.