August 31, 1918. The opinion of the Court was delivered by Action for tort to the person, arising from a fall on a factory floor, alleged to have been covered with oil and uncleaned for weeks before the fall. The verdict was $2,000 *Page 379 actual and $500 punitive damages. The fall was proven by defendant's witness; the extent of the injury was for the jury. There are two exceptions; let them be reported.
On the first issue, that which Costner, the defendant's witness, said was brought out on the direct examination by the defendant's counsel. Costner, a foreman in the room, testified he met the plaintiff on the street, after she had quit the service of the mill, and he told her "if she had not seen him, the superintendent had some money for her," and that was all that was said. The defendant's counsel did not refer to the subject on the cross-examination. In the summing up the plaintiff's counsel suggested to the jury that Costner's speech to the woman was an admission of liability. The record does not show that counsel said aught else to the jury than that. The Court ruled that counsel had the right to argue a conclusion from the testimony, and in that there is no error. The cases cited by the appellant have no relevancy to the facts of the instant case. More than this, the defendant's witnesses, other than Costner, tended to prove liability for actual damage. On the second issue the testimony for the plaintiff tended to show that the floor where the operative fell was very greasy with the dropping of oil from machinery. The plaintiff testified that the floor had not been scoured in a month, while the habit had been to scour it once a week. A witness for the defendant testified that the floor was scoured something like a month before the accident, and that oil was placed on the pulley once a day. The trial Court and the jury concluded that the omission of the defendant, under these circumstances to scour the floor for so long a time, amounted to a conscious failure to perform a known duty. More than one reasonable conclusion was deducible from the testimony, and we are not warranted to weigh the preponderance of the evidence.
The judgment is affirmed. *Page 380