49 S.E. 478 | S.C. | 1904
November 24, 1904. The opinion of the Court was delivered by The plaintiff-respondent brought this action to recover damages for injuries alleged to have been received by him while at work in defendant-appellant's mill. It was alleged that plaintiff was employed to work in the card room, with which he was familiar, but was transferred to work in the picker room, with which he was entirely unfamiliar; that he was not warned of the danger, and was ignorant thereof and incapable of understanding the danger to which the work exposed him; that the machinery was unsafe without adequate guards, and that through these acts of negligence plaintiff's arm was caught in the machinery and lacerated, to his damage $3,000.
Besides a general denial, defendant answered in this language: "That if plaintiff received any injury, as alleged in the complaint, it was caused by his own carelessness and negligence, and not by any negligence on the part of the defendant."
The jury rendered a verdict for $1,500, and from the *213 judgment thereon comes this appeal on exceptions which we now notice in their order:
"First exception. In charging the jury, `I charge you under these pleadings that if you believe that the master, the defendant, in this case, was negligent, and if you believe that the plaintiff was also negligent, both negligent — that both were negligent — then your verdict should be not for the defendant but for the plaintiff, for the reason that the defendant in this case has not pleaded what is known as contributory negligence." It is conceded by appellant that this exception must be overruled, under the authority of Scott v. Railway,
"Second exception. That his Honor erred in charging the jury, `If employee is a person of manifest incapacity to understand the danger to which his work exposes him, the fact the machinery was left unguarded, is competent upon the issue of the master's negligence. You see it does not mean it controls you, but is a fact for you to take into consideration along with other facts of the case.'" This exception is too general, as it fails to point out the specific error intended to be assigned. We do not know except as a matter of speculation, which we are not required to make, whether the error claimed was in submitting to the jury any question as to the "manifest incapacity," or was in charging in respect to a matter of fact.
"Third exception. That his Honor erred in charging the jury, `It is also the duty of the defendant to establish the defense by the preponderance of the testimony, and if he has established the defense by the preponderance of the testimony — that is to say, I was not negligent, but this man was injured by reason of his own carelessness and his own negligence — then you should write your verdict for the defendant.' Thereby improperly putting upon defendant the burden of proving not only that plaintiff was negligent, but also that the defendant was not negligent." This exception is well taken and must be sustained. The defendant's answer was nothing more in legal effect *214
than a general denial. It set up no affirmative defense which defendant was required to establish by a preponderance of the evidence. Wilson v. C. S. Ry. Co.,
The fourth exception complains of error in refusing the motion for a new trial, appellant alleging that the refusal was based upon erroneous legal grounds. Considering all that the Court said in refusing the motion for a new trial, we are satisfied that his refusal was based upon his views that there was testimony to support the verdict, and in such case the refusal of new trial is not reviewable.
For the error pointed out in considering the third exception, the judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed, and the case remanded for a new trial.