100 S.E. 194 | N.C. | 1919
The action is to recover damages for physical injury, caused by alleged negligence of defendant in not supplying plaintiff, an employee, with sufficient and proper tools with which to do his work. On denial of liability and plea of contributory negligence, there was verdict for plaintiff and assessing damages at $550.
Judgment on the verdict for plaintiff and defendant appealed, assigning for error, chiefly, the refusal of the motion for nonsuit.
There were facts in evidence tending to show that in August, 1917, plaintiff, employed by defendant for the purpose, was engaged in taking down some cars, situate on a logging road a few miles out from Belhaven, N.C.; that they were old cars, and it being desirable to save as much of the iron as possible in shape for further use, it was not infrequently required to cut the iron bolts from the rods used in bracing the woodwork of the cars and serving to hold the frames together; that plaintiff, a carpenter of skill and experience, 63 or 64 years of age, having the ordinary tools for his work, which he was to use as required on the present job, had taken down one or two of the cars, when finding that he was not making satisfactory progress for lack of a helper and adequate tools for the undertaking, applied for an assistant and proper tools and was authorized to procure the help needed, and was given further tools which he claimed were fit and proper, to wit, a cold chisel and a hacksaw frame and blades for cutting iron and a Stilson wrench, according to defendants, this last being the only tool plaintiff had specifically mentioned, and that the hardware store was directed to let him have the tools he selected, and the cold chisel, hacksaw, frame and blades were both new and fitted for the work. That after he with his assistant, one Wallace, had been engaged on the work for two or three days, while plaintiff was holding the cold chisel in place to cut off an iron bolt, plaintiff directed Wallace to strike the same with an ax of the company which plaintiff says he had found out at the cars, and as Wallace struck with the ax it came off the handle, the eye of the ax striking plaintiff's (90) foot and making a bruise thereon which resulted in painful and protracted injury from which he still suffers. A perusal of our decisions on the subject will show that in order for liability to attach, in case of simple, every-day tools, it must appear, among other things, that the injury has resulted from a lack of such tools or defects therein which the employer is required to remedy, in the proper and reasonable discharge of his duties, and that the lack or defect complained of and made the basis of the charge is of a kind from which some appreciable and substantial injury may be reasonably expected to occur. Thus, in the recent case of Rogerson v. Hontz,
"On the facts as now presented the evidence tends to show that this cant hook was an implement suitable to the work and which the *96 employer should supply; that while simple in itself it was designed, by leverage, to give the workman more power; that he was engaged in loading and unloading heavy logs from cars, rough work, and where he was frequently liable to be in position that if the hook slipped its hold or the handle broke severe injuries were not improbable, and, applying the principles of the case referred to and others of like import, the issue must be referred to the jury on the question whether the tool was defective; was such defect known to the employer, and was it of a kind which threatened substantial injury in its use?"
Again, in another very similar case in the same volume, King v. R. R.,
"In Rogerson v. Hontz, at the present term, the Court has held, in approving the decision of Wright v. Thompson,
"The whole subject has been very recently reviewed in Wrightv. Thompson,
On consideration of his entire statement and the other uncontradicted testimony you are forced to the conclusion that plaintiff's injuries are attributable to his own default or that of his colaborer in not keeping his axe in safer condition. As he says himself, "I hadn't looked at the ax; I suppose I didn't take time."
This will be certified that the verdict and judgment be set aside and defendant's motion for nonsuit be allowed.
Reversed.
Cited: Allen v. Lumber Co.,