The defendant having demurred to the evidence and moved for nonsuit, its first exception is directed to 'the refusal of his Honor to sustain the motion. The plaintiff testified, in substance, that he entered the employment of the defendant on January 20, 1899, coining to Greensboro from Chatham County where he had lived up to that time; that he was hired to truck freight and handle goods. That the goods were trucked on different floors and carried from one floor to another on an elevator. That he had seen one or two elevators before entering the service of the defendant, but had never been on one and had never seen one work. In about a month after he entered the service of the defendant it removed its stock of goods to another building, and that the elevator by which he was injured was put into the building to which the defendant moved; that the elevator was a large one run by a wire cable; that it would run with good speed; that a rope was used in pulling the elevator up, and there was a cable that ran over a pulley; that there was a weight in a box two feet by six inches at the back of the elevator on the side of the wall, and that the box ran from the upper floor to the bottom of a five-story building, counting the basement, and that the weight ascended and descended; that it ran to the fourth story; that goods were carried up from one floor to the other by this elevator, and that when the elevator was loaded the plaintiff would get on it and pull it up; that at the time he got hurt he usually rode on the elevator; a man who wanted to carry goods from one floor to another generally got on the elevator and rode up, if there was not too many goods on the elevator, and that sometimes as much as two thousand pounds was put on, and that it was his duty to carry the goods from one floor to another, and that he did as others, rode on the elevator; that the proprietors and others rode on it; that he was certain he had ridden on the elevator *477 with the president of the company; that no one had told him not to ride on the elevator. That on the day he was hurt there was six hundred pounds of goods on the elevator besides his own weight; this was a very small load. There was no understanding with him about inspecting the elevator, and it was no part of his duty to do so; that there was another man in the house that did more of that kind of work than the plaintiff; the elevator was never inspected while he was at work for the defendant, to his knowledge, that he knew of no defect in it. There was a stairway leading from one floor to another which was constantly used, and he had the option of going up and down the elevator, and rode on it of his own volition, and for the reason that everybody else rode on it; he did not ride on it all the time, sometimes walked down the steps, sometimes rode on the elevator, being merely a matter of choice; that he had been operating this elevator from the time it was put up early in 1899 to August, 1900, and that it was a new elevator. The box containing the weight ran alongside of the wall and extended from the basement floor up as high as the plaintiff’s head above the fourth floor, and that there was an open space in the box near the top and above the fourth floor, but that he had never noticed as to whether the condition of the weight and its fastening to the cable could be seen through this opening at the top of the box when the elevator car was at the bottom floor. The cable was a wire rope, composed of several strands of wire, and was about three-quarters of an inch in diameter, but he did not know how it fastened to the weight. That at the time of the accident he tqpk off the brake and the elevator fell from the fourth floor to the basement; that this took place when he stepped on the elevator and released the brake.
A witness introduced by the plaintiff testified that he was booker for the defendant at the time of the injury in question ; that the goods were taken to their proper place by the *478 elevator, and. brought down in the same way when shipped. That the plaintiff’s duties were to take the list of goods given him by the shipping clerk and get the goods out and bring them to the front door and put them on the dray. The elevator was not used by the officers of the company, but he believed he had seen Simpson go up on the elevator, but not often; it Avas a freight elevator; that investigation Avas made by the company as to the cause of the falling of the eleAmtor and Avitness could see Avkere the planks Avere rough or uneven. After the accident AAdtness noticed fastening of the cable to the Aveight, and the cable was fastened by running through an eye in the Aveight and running back about eighteen inches, and the lapped portions Avere fastened Avith four clamps screwed together Avith bolts and nuts; that one clamp held the cable ends together and another fastened be^een that and the Aveight; that when witness first saAv clamps after accident they seemed to be all right and seemed to be securely fixed together; but the rope had slipped through; that the clamps were not loose; that the end of the cable Avas frayed; that the same clamps Avere used in fastening the cable back to the Aveight after the accident.
Defendant’s first contention is that upon the plaintiff’s eAÜdence his Honor should have dismissed the action. This contention presents the inquiry Avhether there Avas any' caú-dence that the eleAmtor was defective in its original construction or had become so by use, and AA^hether there Avas any evidence of negligence in failing to inspect the elevator.
We approAre the instruction given by his Honor in respect to the duty of the employer to furnish to his employee safe machinery and appliances. “When one enters the service of another it becomes the duty of the employer to provide safe appliances for his use. It also becomes the duty of the employee from time to time to give inspection to these appliances and to see that they are kept in proper repair. It is
*479
not the duty of tbe master to provide tbe safest and newest or best appliances, but tbe duty wbicb tbe law imposes upon him is that be furnish reasonably safe appliances, such as are in general use, and that be give such inspection to them as, from tbe nature of tbe appliances and tbe circumstances connected therewith, a man of ordinary prudence and judgment would have given.” This charge is amply sustained by tbe authorities. Labatt Master and Servant, section 14, and cases cited. The principle as applied to elevators used by employees is thus stated by tbe author of that very excellent work: “An employer may be held liable if tbe safetv devices which be is bound to provide for an elevator designed for tbe use of bis servants prove defective. Tbe employer must also respond in damages if an elevator, wbicb is either conducted specially for tbe conveyance of tbe servants or which, though constructed primarily for tbe carriage of freight, is also used with his acquiescence for tbe conveyance of servants, is in any other way abnormally dangerous to use.” Labatt Master and Servant, section 91;
Boot Co. v. Jerman,
In the note to
Huey v.
Gahlenbec,
In Boot Co. v. Jumar, supra, the Court said: “If the jury believed that maintaining the sheathing over the elevator, and especially over the portion of it where the shifting ropes were located, made its operation in that condition dangerous, that was itself a defect that might have been discovered by the use of ordinary care and diligence in inspecting the elevator.”
In
Windleman v. Colladay,
In this case the contention was made that the doctrine of
res ipsa loquitur
did not apply between master and servant. It was rejected, the Court saying: “No authority was cited for this contention in the Court below and none can be
*484
found.”
Howser v.
Railroad,
In
McGuigan v.
Beatty,
Upon a careful examination of the entire record and the defendant’s exceptions and assignments we find no error. The judgment must be
Affirmed.
