118 Ga. 655 | Ga. | 1903
This was an action against a job-printing establishment, a corporation, by an employee, to recover damages for injuries alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff while working a printing-press. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendant, and the plaintiff excepts to the overruling of his motion for a new trial. The evidence authorized the finding of the jury. In fact, it not only warranted but it almost demanded a finding that the plaintiff’s injuries were the result either of a mere accident or of his own carelessness. The judgment refusing to grant a new trial will therefore not be reversed, unless there has been some error of law which had a tendency to substantially affect the finding of the jury on the facts. The plaintiff was a young man seventeen years of age, and inexperienced in operating a printing-press. He claims that his injuries resulted from the fact that he was put to work upon the press before he was sufficiently instructed as to the dangers incident to the operation of the machine, and that the immediate cause of the injury was the fact that the employee who was assigned to the duty of instructing him negligently increased the speed of the press at which he was working, and as a result his hand was caught therein, when it could have been removed if the speed had not been increased. The judge charged the jury fully on the subject of the duty of a master to instruct inexperienced employees. He also charged the law in reference to the non-liability of a master to one servant for injuries due to the negligence of a fellow-servant. The charge, considered as a
The issues raised by the evidence authorized a charge on the doctrine of fellow-servant, and the evidence demanded a finding that the employee who caused the change in speed of the machine was a fellow-servant, provided the jury believed, as they had a right to do under the testimony of this very employee, that the defendant had passed out from under the period of necessary instruction. It is contended, though, that the judge had no right to charge upon the doctrine of fellow-servant, because there was no plea setting up this defense, and that the judge gave the defendant the benefit of'a
Judgment affirmed.