268 N.C. 406 | N.C. | 1966
Plaintiff’s evidence, considered in the light most favorable to her, and giving her the benefit of all reasonable inferences-to be drawn therefrom, and the judicial admissions in the answer (Norburn v. Mackie, 262 N.C. 16, 136 S.E. 2d 279), would permit, a jury to find the following facts:
On 10 September 1963 plaintiff was employed by defendants' as a domestic servant to perform ordinary domestic work in defendants’ home, which included sweeping floors and looking after defendants’ children. Prior to that date she had worked for defendants one to three days a week as defendants requested her services. The front porch of defendants’ home is about six feet above the ground. The porch had a top railing consisting of a board connected with a post at the west end of the porch and running horizontally several feet to and connecting with another post, and running horizontally from that post several feet to and connecting with the outside wall of a room of defendants’ home. The top of this railing came up to about plaintiff’s hips. Beneath the top board was a similar board, which was about five inches from the floor of the porch, running horizontally and connected with the same posts and the same wall of defendants’ home. Between these boards at frequent intervals were wooden slats. Hay for small ponies was kept by defendants on this porch. On the morning of 10 September 1963 Mrs. Barrier told plaintiff that Sherry, her small daughter, had just started walking
Plaintiff at the time weighed about 240 pounds. She took a broom and started at the west end of the porch right where the railing connected with the post. She leaned over the railing to clean beneath it, as Mrs. Barrier had instructed her to do, and the railing, which was rotten, came apart from the post and she fell from the porch six feet to the ground. A piece of the railing or bannister was lying across her body, and it was rotten, completely rotten. About six months before, this railing had been painted and the paint was over the rotten places so she could not see the rotten places in the railing.
In the fall her collarbone was broken and her right leg was hurt. By reason of her injuries she could not get up from the ground and lay there about 20 or 25 minutes. About 10 minutes after she fell, Mr. Barrier came running around the house to where she was lying on the ground. He told her he was sorry she was hurt, and it was his fault, that the railing should have been fixed when he painted it about six months previously. Since the feme defendant lived in the same house with her husband, the jury could draw the legitimate inference that the rotten condition of this railing before it was painted was also known to her.
According to the judicial admissions in the answer and the evidence, defendants were the employers of plaintiff and she was their employee on the day she was injured, and when injured she was leaning over the railing to the front porch and attempting to sweep beneath it within the course and scope of her employment, as she was specifically shown and directed to do by Mrs. Barrier, when the railing, because of its rotten condition, broke loose where it was connected with the post at the west end of the porch, resulting in plaintiff’s falling six feet to the ground.
Actionable negligence on the part of the employer is essential to his liability at common law for an injury sustained by his employee when acting in the course and scope of his employment. The employer, however, is not an insurer of his employee’s safety while engaged in the performance of duties within the scope of his employment. Fore v. Geary, 191 N.C. 90, 131 S.E. 387; Muldrow v. Weinstein, 234 N.C. 587, 68 S.E. 2d 249; 3 Strong’s N. C. Index, Master and Servant, § 22.
When an employee has been directed by his employer to work in a place that is unsafe and dangerous because of a hidden or concealed defect and the employer has actual or constructive notice of the defect and the employee is ignorant of it, the employer as a general rule is liable for exposing the employee to a peril of which he had no knowledge when it proximately results in injury to the employee. Cole v. R. R., 199 N.C. 389, 393, 154 S.E. 682, 685; 56 C.J.S., Master and Servant, § 244; 35 Am. Jur., Master and Servant, §§ 149 and 184; Prosser, Law of Torts, 3d Ed., pp. 546-48.
The general common law principles governing the liability of a master for injury to his servant have been applied in cases involving domestic servants. Devens v. Goldberg, 33 Cal. 2d 173, 199 P. 2d 943; Gordon v. Clotsworthy, 127 Colo. 377, 257 P. 2d 410, 49 A.L.R. 2d 314; elaborate annotation 49 A.L.R. 2d 317, entitled “Duty and liability of employer to domestic servant for personal injury or death”; 35 Am. Jur., Master and Servant, § 138; 56 C.J.S., Master and Servant, § 201.
In Devens v. Goldberg, supra, the Court, inter alia, held, as stated in headnotes in the Pacific Reporter:
“In action against employer for injuries sustained by cleaning woman when porch railing gave way while she was shaking rug, whether a defective condition in railing existed, whether a reasonable inspection would have revealed the defect, and what constituted a reasonably adequate inspection under ceircum-stances were questions for jury.”
“It is common knowledge that all wooden structures are liable to get out of repair and that exercise of care is necessary to guard against the wear and tear of use and time.”
In the lower court a judgment was entered for the defendant notwithstanding a verdict for Katherine Devens, the plaintiff, and the plaintiff appealed. The prior opinion is reported in 189 P. 2d 859. The Supreme Court of California sitting en banc reversed the judgment of the trial court and directed the trial court to enter judgment for the plaintiff in accordance with the verdict.
What is the proximate or a proximate cause of an injury is ordinarily a question for a jury. It is to be determined as a fact from the attendant facts and circumstances. Conflicting inferences of causation arising from the evidence carry the case to the jury. Pruett v. Inman, 252 N.C. 520, 114 S.E. 2d 360. The uncontradicted evidence in the record before us shows that plaintiff was attempting with a broom to lean over and to sweep beneath the railing on the front porch as she was directed to do by the jeme defendant, who at the time was acting as an agent for her husband; that the railing, because of its rotten condition, broke loose where it was fastened to the post at the west end of the front porch; that the rotten condition of the railing was covered over with paint so that plaintiff could not see it or could not know of it; and that when the railing broke loose plaintiff fell to the ground. Considering plaintiff’s evidence in the light most favorable to her, Short v. Chapman, 261 N.C. 674, 136 S.E. 2d 40, it cannot be said that it establishes as a matter of law that plaintiff failed to exercise ordinary care for her own safety and legal contributory negligence on her part so clearly that no other conclusion can be reasonably drawn therefrom.
The judgment of compulsory nonsuit was improvidently entered, and is
Reversed.