Thomason v. Victor Mfg. Co.

July 14, 1913. The opinion of the Court was delivered by. This was an action for damages (compensatory and punitive) by respondent against appellant for an injury sustained by the respondent while in the employ of the appellant. The answer of appellant was a denial of the material allegations of the complaint, and sets up the plea of contributory negligence and assumption of risk on the part of plaintiff-respondent. The case was tried before Judge Sease, and a jury, and resulted in a verdict in favor of plaintiff-respondent, in the sum of five hundred *Page 243 and fifty dollars. The appellant appeals and alleges error on the part of his Honor in eight exceptions.

The first three exceptions allege error on the part of his Honor in not granting a nonsuit at the close of plaintiff's testimony. In the consideration of this question this Court will consider all of the testimony in the case, and from the evidence in the case, we see no error on the part of his Honor in refusing to grant the nonsuit. There is no question but that it is the duty of the master to furnish the servant a reasonably safe place within which to work, and keep the place within reasonable repair. There was abundance of evidence to go to the jury to be determined by them whether the place, at which plaintiff was injured, was unsafe, and these exceptions are overruled.

The fourth and fifth exceptions allege error in not directing a verdict for the defendant on the ground that there was no evidence of wilfulness or wantonness, and also on the whole case. There was sufficient testimony to carry the case to the jury on the question of negligence, and his Honor committed no error in this; he should, however, have sustained the motion that there was no evidence to sustain the contention that there was wilfulness and wantonness, but this was harmless, and not at all prejudicial to the defendant, for in his charge to the jury, later, he said to them: "Negligence is inadvertence. Now, on the contrary, as a contrast, but with that you have nothing to do in the consideration of this case — wilfulness is advertence. Nobody claims in this case that there is any wilfulness;" and throughout his whole charge he nowhere told the jury, in estimating damages, that they could award punitive damages for wilfulness or wantonness, but was careful to charge them that in estimating damages they were to consider the question of negligence on the part of defendant, and contributory negligence and assumption of risk on the part of plaintiff. These exceptions are overruled. *Page 244

The sixth exception alleges error in his Honor's charge to the jury. We see no error as complained of. It is the duty of the master to furnish a reasonably safe and suitable place for the servant to work at, and keep the same in reasonably safe and suitable repair. Mr. Justice Woods, in Green v. Southern Ry., 72 S.C. page 401, 52 S.E. 45, uses this language: "In every suit of a servant against a master for personal injury arising from the use of machinery, inquiry is directed mainly to two forces operating under natural laws, namely, the master's machine supplied to the servant, and the servant's mind and hands acting on the machine. The injury is usually due either to the error of the master in failing to supply safe machinery, or to the error of the servant in the use of his mind and hands, or to both of these causes acting together. But an error of the master in furnishing a defective machine does not conclusively imply negligence by the master, for he may have used due, and even great, care in its selection; nor does an error of the servant in the use of the machinery conclusively imply negligence on his part, for he may be in actual error while doing just what a prudent man would do under like circumstances. Neither the master nor the servant is charged with perfect knowledge of all natural laws and forces under which they act, nor even with errorless conduct in applying their imperfect knowledge of such laws and forces; and hence they are chargeable only with the results of errors, which are due to negligence. The servant on entering the employment assumes the risk of his own errors, whether due to negligence or not, and he assumes also the risk of the operation of the machine and of the errors of the master unless the master fails to use due care in making the machine safe. When an injury to a servant is proved to result from a defective machine, the law puts upon the master the burden of proving that he used due care in making it safe. Lasure v. Mfg. Co.,18 S.C. 275; Carter v. Oliver Oil Co., 34 S.C. 211, *Page 245 13 S.E. 419; Branch v. Ry. Co., 35 S.C. 405, 14 S.E. 808," and his Honor committed no error.

We cannot see that he was in error in refusing to charge the seventh and eight exceptions, he left all of the facts to the jury to find what were the conditions at the time of the injury. He charged the jury carefully and fully as to the issues made by the pleadings and evidence, and in his own language, instructed them fully as to the law of the case, and all of the law embodied in these requests were substantially charged in his Honor's general charge. Reference to the charge shows that the substance of every sound proposition of law, contained in the requests, was given to the jury. "The Judge has the right to charge the law of the case in his own language, and where he fully discharges this duty, he is not required to charge abstract or sound propositions of the law applicable." Joyner v.Atlantic Coast Line R.R. Co., 91 S.C. 104, 74 S.E. 825.

All exceptions are overruled.

Judgment affirmed.