12 Ga. App. 19 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1912
This case is here on exception to a judgment granting a nonsuit. The petition made, in substance, the following case: Plaintiff, a negro boy, sixteen years of age, was employed by the defendant company as a common laborer, to assist in unloading kainit, or acid phosphate, from the hold of a schooner in the port of Savannah. This substance was very hard and almost' solid, and the
The bill of exceptions recites that the nonsuit was granted because the evidence in behalf of the plaintiff showed knowledge on his part that water would soften the acid .phosphate, and generally because the evidence showed no right of recovery' in the plaintiff. But the undisputed evidence of the plaintiff is as above stated, and, we think, neither for the reason given for the nonsuit, nor for any other reason, was the evidence of such a conclusive character
It is well settled that when a servant knows the condition of things and also the danger of working under this condition, he assumes the risks of his employment. But here the evidence shows that this plaintiff was inexperienced and did not know the effect of water upon the solid mass of kainit. It was the master’s' duty to furnish him a' reasonably safe place in which to do his work, and to inform him of any danger which, at any time when he was doing his work, would render the place unsafe. In other words, it was the master’s duty in the present case to have informed this inexperienced laborer of the facts,—not only that water was falling on this mass, but the effect of water on it, and the danger attendant upon working beneath it under such conditions. These facts must be presumed to have been within the knowledge of the master. How was this inexperienced boy to know the chemical effect of water upon this acid phosphate, or kainit, even if he had known that rain had fallen upon it? And we do not think that an inexperienced laborer who had received no warning would be charged, as a matter of law, with knowledge of the effect which water would have upon this solid mass, and a consequent comprehension of the danger - arising therefrom to him. While the law supposes, every .adult person to be possessed" of such knowledge, intelligence, and ■discretion as will enable him to appreciate any obvious danger and see and understand those dangers which are the subject of common knowledge, or which can be readily seen from common observation, and that all servants of ordinary intelligence are presumed to be acquainted- with the properties of matter and the laws to which they are subject, yet it can not be said that an inexperienced servant, whether a minor or an adult, is bound to take notice of the dangers
Without extending this discussion any further, we are clearly of the opinion that the question of negligence was at least issuable, under the allegations of the plaintiff’s petition and the evidence, and that the trial judge erred in holding, as a matter of law, that the plaintiff had failed to make out at least a. prima facie case against the defendant. 26 Cyc. 1172; Perry v. Marsh, 25 Ala. 659; Quigley v. Bambrick, 58 Mo. App. 192; 1 Labatt, Master & Servant, 1036 et seq., and many cases cited in the notes.
Judgment reversed.