34 Ga. App. 746 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1925
1. “In the trial of a case brought by a servant against a master to recover damages for personal injuries received by the servant in the use of defective machinery furnished by the master, it was error to charge, in effect, that the master was liable for the injuries so received if he was negligent in failing to provide machinery reasonably safe for the work, or to keep the machinery in proper repair, and that if .the master had been negligent in either of these particulars, and the servant was injured in consequence of that negligence, the master would be liable, without instructing the jury in the same connection, either literally or in substance, that before the servant could recover for such injuries, it must appear that he did not know and had not equal means with the master of knowing such fact, and by the exercise of ordinary care could not have known thereof.” Manchester Manufacturing Co. v. Polk, 115 Ga. 543 (3) (41 S. E. 1015). The following charge was erroneous because of its practical incompleteness in the respects pointed out in the foregoing quotation: “It was the duty of the [master] in this case, to exercise ordinary care for the safety of those in its service in providing them with machinery and appliances reasonably safe and suitable for their use; and where the servant is injured through a defect existing in the machinery
2. The charge relative to the measure of damages .is substantially the same as that excepted to in' Furney v. Tower, ante, 739, and the exceptions taken to it are practically • the same. It was defective for the reasons assigned in the 6th and 7th divisions of the decision in that case.
3. The remaining exceptions taken to the charge relate to matters not likely to occur on another trial, and need not be considered.
Judgment reversed.