Pollard v. Fountain Inn Oil Co.

May 14, 1910. The opinion of the Court was delivered by This is an appeal from an order of nonsuit.

The facts are thus stated in the argument of the appellant's attorneys:

"At the time of the accident, January 17, 1908, Charles Pollard, a young man twenty-two years old, was employed by the defendant, to attend to the linters and cotton gins, in the defendant's oil mill and ginnery. On the morning of that day he was directed to operate the gins, and when he started at this work he discovered that the lacing of the belt to one of the gins, which connected the pulley of the gin with a pulley attached to the shafting on the ground floor, directly underneath the gin, had been removed to supply a broken lacing upon a belt in the oil mill. This belt had to be repaired before the gin could be operated. At this time the belt was hanging loose on the gin pulley, one end lying on the floor of the ginnery and the other end on the ground floor beneath, near the pulley which was attached to the shafting which supplied the power. Two holes had been cut in the ginnery floor, directly under the pulley on the gin, through which the belt was intended to pass, and through one of these holes the belt then was. To get the two ends of the belting together for the purpose of lacing it, as the end lying on the ground underneath could not be reached and pulled up through the hole by one standing on *Page 71 the ginnery floor, it became necessary for Pollard to descend to the ground floor, which he did by means of a set of steps near the middle of the building, the landing place of which was within a few feet of the pulley on the ground floor, and the way thereto free and unobstructed. Pollard approached the belt, as it was hanging through the hole in the floor above, in the most direct route, and on the side of the shafting upon which it was hanging; he called to one of his friends to push the other end of the belt through the other hole in the floor, that he might catch it, draw it underneath the shafting, relace it and adjust it to the pulley. A post to which the shafting was attached was about eleven inches from the pulley, and in this space the belt was hanging. Between the pully and the post, in this eleven-inch space there was a `collar' screwed to the shafting by two `setscrews,' the heads of which projected above half an inch. The shafting was revolving at the time, which made the projecting set-screws practically invisible. As Pollard reached over the shafting to catch the loose end of the belt hanging on the opposite side, his clothing was caught by the setscrews so projecting, and his body beat to death against the upright and overhead timbers."

At the close of the plaintiff's testimony, the defendant made a motion for a nonsuit, which was granted for the reasons therein set out. Subsequently plaintiff's attorneys made a motion to set aside the order of nonsuit. After hearing argument, his Honor, the Circuit Judge, was satisfied that the nonsuit should remain, and assigned the following reasons for his ruling:

"The plaintiff's testimony showed that the collar with the projecting set-screw such as defendant used, was an appliance almost universally used in ginneries. One of the witnesses had known of one or two instances where ginneries had employed collars with set-screws let down into them, but he stated that these were the exceptions. There was no *Page 72 evidence tending to show that this kind of appliance would not be used by a master of ordinary prudence and foresight. The very reverse was shown. In addition, plaintiff's testimony showed that the collar and set-screw in question were at a point where it was impossible for the human body to pass. It was located between the pulley and a large post, to which the shafting was attached, in a space of about eleven inches. On the other side of this pulley there was a clear space of from three to four feet that was free from any danger, and where the work could have been as well done. Here, then, was a case where the deceased had two ways of doing the work in hand. One of them involved danger of contact with the set-screw, the other was free from danger. He chose the dangerous way, and assumed the risk involved.

"Furthermore, the evidence showed that the deceased was in charge of the ginnery; that the engineer was subject to his directions and control; it was in his power, therefore, to have stopped the machinery if he had deemed it necessary for his safety to do so. If, being free to stop the machinery, he elected to do the work while it was running, he must be taken to have assumed the risk. It is certain that the defendant had given him no directions to do the work while the machinery was running.

"The deceased had been at work in this ginnery for some two or three years, and for about one month had been in charge of the ginning establishment. He must be taken to have been aware of the presence of the collar and set-screw, located as they were in a well lighted room.

"On the whole, I conclude as follows: That there was no evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant, operating as a proximate cause of the death of the deceased; that the risk was one ordinarily incident to the employment in which the deceased was engaged; that the risk was plain and obvious to a man of ordinary observation, and was assumed by the deceased. That having a perfectly safe way to do *Page 73 the work, he voluntarily selected a method involving danger to himself, and thereby assumed the risk."

For the reason assigned by his Honor, the Circuit Judge, the order of nonsuit is affirmed.