April 28, 1903. The first opinion in this case was delivered by The plaintiff in this action claims damages against the defendant, alleging that the defendant delivered to him as one of its freight conductors for transportation from Augusta, Ga., to Greenwood, S.C. a car, old, worn out and with flat wheels, and negligently loaded by defendant with lumber in an insecure and unsafe manner, with only two standards on each side, and with improper appliances and equipments; that by reason of the defective cars *Page 206 and appliances and improper loading, the lumber became loose and disarranged, and was about to derail the train to which the car was attached and cause a wreck; that the train being without a bell-cord, or signal, or means by which he could stop it, plaintiff undertook to arrange the lumber so as to prevent disaster, and to save the lives of the railroad's employees and its property, and while so engaged, the lumber was thrown against him, by reason of which he suffered great bodily injury. There were other allegations not essential to the decision of the case as now presented. The defendant denied negligence on its part, charging the plaintiff's injury was caused by his own negligence; and further alleged that if the injury was caused by any negligence of defendant, plaintiff contributed to it and so could not recover. At the close of plaintiff's case, defendant moved for a nonsuit:
"First. On the ground that it appears clearly from the testimony that whatever defects there were in the car in this loading were well known to the plaintiff.
"Second. That the facts which have appeared here from the testimony of plaintiff, to my mind, show beyond a question that the plaintiff, even if the defendant was guilty of negligence, was himself guilty of contributory negligence, and, therefore, he cannot recover.
"Third. That he had such knowledge of these defects."
The plaintiff had testified, in substance, that he did not examine the car before he left August, it not being his duty to do so, because at that point the company had car inspectors; that he knew nothing of defects until after leaving Augusta, but carried the car several stations after he discovered them, thinking the trouble not serious enough to warrant him in dropping the car. The plaintiff further said it would have been a great deal safer if he had stopped trying to arrange the lumber when he saw it would not strike a car on the siding which the train was then passing, and that if he had not continued in this, he thought the accident would not have occurred. It is on this *Page 207 testimony, as we understand the motion for a nonsuit was based. If the defendant did not usually require its freight conductors at Augusta to examine the cars, but imposed that duty on another officer, then it is manifest the plaintiff could not be charged with negligence for failing to examine and ascertain the defects before taking the car, and the nonsuit could not be granted on that ground.
Nor do we think the motion should have been granted on the ground that plaintiff failed to cut out and leave the car at a siding after he discovered the defects. The Constitution provides, art. IX., sec. 15: "Knowledge of any employee injured of the defective or unsafe character or condition of any machinery, ways or appliances, shall be no defense to an action for injury caused thereby, except as to conductors or engineers in charge of dangerous or unsafe cars or engines voluntarily operated by them." It will be observed that in the first line of this section the terms used are "defective or unsafe," while in the exception made as to conductors and engineers, they are "dangerous or unsafe." A conductor, therefore, is not precluded from recovering for any injury arising from voluntarily operating a defective car, unless it is so defective as to be dangerous or unsafe. This exception in the Constitution, we think, did not in any way change the limitation before existing upon the right of recovery of conductors and engineers for injuries arising from defects in engines and cars known to them. It was not the law before the adoption of the Constitution, and it was not made the law by the clause above quoted, that an engineer or conductor carries forward his train at his peril, on the discovery after he has started on his trip of any defect in his engine or cars, which could possibly produce injury. Even slight defects under unforeseen conditions may produce disaster, but they could not for that reason be judicially declared sufficient to make the car or engine unsafe or dangerous. To defeat the claim of a conductor or engineer for injury in cases of this character, the knowledge must be of defects which the conductor or engineer believed *Page 208 to be dangerous or unsafe, or which he ought to have regarded dangerous or unsafe, in the exercise of ordinary prudence and reason. Any other view would not only be straining the meaning of words, but would be unreasonable and result in an intolerable hardship both to the public and those charged with the conduct of railroads; for it would require an engineer or conductor upon discovery of any slight defect of machinery to stop his train or proceed at his peril. I. Shearman Redfield on Negligence, sections 211, 214; Lasure v. Manf. Co., 18 S.C. 280; Snow v. R.R. Co., 8 Allen, 441; Parker v. R.R. Co., 48 S.C. 384,26 S.E., 669; Bussey v. R.R. Co., 52 S.C. 443, 30 S.E., 477; Bodie v. R.R. Co., 61 S.C. 478, 39 S.E., 715. The true rule is well stated in Hurst v. R.R. Co., 163 Mo., 309: "When an employee has full knowledge of the risks of his situation and accepts them, he assumes such risks as are incident to their discharge, and if subsequently injured by such risks, he will not be entitled to recover damages for injuries sustained in consequence thereof, against his master, unless `it was not so dangerous as to threaten immediate injury, or if he might have reasonably supposed that he could safely work about it by the use of care and caution.'" It was, therefore, a question for the jury to determine whether the defects in the car, which the plaintiff says he discovered after he started on his trip, were such that he regarded the car dangerous or unsafe, or such that the ought to have so regarded it in the exercise of ordinary prudence and judgment. If the defects were of this character, and the plaintiff was in charge of the car and could have dropped it before the accident, he could not recover. The presiding Judge could not determine this inquiry, and the motion for nonsuit was properly refused.
It is unnecessary to discuss any duty of the plaintiff as conductor to look out for and discover the alleged defects in the car after it left Augusta, for the plaintiff testified he actually did discover them before the accident occurred.
It follows, from the views expressed in considering the motion for nonsuit, that the exceptions to the charge covered *Page 209 by the second and fifth grounds of appeal, and the third ground of appeal down to and including subdivision (b), must be overruled.
The presiding Judge instructed the jury: "If it was the duty of the conductor to make up his train in the city of Augusta and see that everything was in good order, and that the cars were properly loaded, and if plaintiff in this case was the conductor and it was his duty in the city of Augusta to see that everything was in good shape, in good order when he left there; if he had knowledge of the fact that the cars were unsafe and unsuitable and dangerous; if he had knowledge of that fact and moved those cars, then he assumed the duties incident to his office being conductor, and he cannot recover. But if the duty was imposed upon the railroad authorities, and such authorities loaded that car and turned it over to him, and it was not his duty to investigate as to whether everything was safe and suitable and in good order, the train which was turned over to him in the city of Augusta loaded by the officials there, then the conductor had a right to assume that safe and suitable appliances had been furnished; that the car turned over to him was properly loaded, and that the machinery to run it was safe, and that the appliances were safe and suitable." This was all appellants could ask as to the plaintiff's duty before leaving Augusta, but it does not cover his duty after the discovery of defects on the journey. The portion of the charge quoted would, I think, convey the impression to the jury that the plaintiff might continue to assume the car was not dangerous even after he had discovered on his journey the alleged defects, and it negatives the idea that he owed any duty to exercise judgment or discretion as to whether he should undertake to carry the car on after he knew of the defects. But it is argued, this erroneous impression made on the minds of the jury was removed by the general instructions given on the subject of contributory negligence, which were quite free from objection, and by the defendant's second request, which was given to the jury in the following *Page 210 words: "`If the jury believe from the evidence that the plaintiff, Barksdale, knew of the defects alleged to be in the lumber car — the train he was operating — and the manner in which the lumber referred to in the complaint was loaded, and voluntarily operated the same, and took the risks of injury therefrom, then he cannot recover.' I charge you that, taken in connection with what I have heretofore said to you along that line." As has been remarked, what had been before said on this point had by implication negatived the idea that there was any duty of the plaintiff to cease to operate dangerous machinery, if he had discovered the danger after leaving Augusta. The general statement made in this respect, standing alone, might be construed to cover the duty of the plaintiff in this regard both before he had commenced his trip and while he was on his journey, for it might refer to one as well as the other; but when it is remembered that the presiding Judge had before practically excluded from the jury the consideration of any duty of the plaintiff to abandon a car discovered on the trip to be dangerous, I think the jury must reasonably have supposed he intended this statement also to refer only to any discovery of defects made before leaving August. This conviction is much strengthened when we observe the presiding Judge expressly says this instruction is given in connection with a portion of the charge, which certainly tended to lead the jury to think they were to consider only such knowledge of defects as plaintiff had before leaving Augusta. The general statement of the law of contributory negligence could not cure the error, because it consisted in using language tending to produce the impression on the minds of the jury that this general law did not require the plaintiff to abandon a dangerous car unless he had discovered its defects before it was turned over to him. I do not lose sight of the fact that the defense of assumption of risk was not pleaded by defendant, nor of the distinction between that defense and contributory negligence. In Bodie v. Ry. Co., 61 S.C. 478,39 S.E., 715. Associate Justice Jones remarks: "The doctrine of assumption *Page 211 of risk by the employee is distinct from the doctrine of contributory negligence, although there may arise a certain condition of facts capable of supporting either inference." This is followed by as clear a distinction between the two defenses as the nature of the subject will allow, concluding with this statement: "When, therefore, a case arises in which it is shown (upon proper pleadings) that the employee has assumed the risk from which the injury arose, or what is the same thing in effect, has waived his right to hold the employer responsible for the risk, the employee's action is defeated because of his agreement and not because of negligence. `Contributory negligence,' on the other hand, rests in the law of torts, as applied to negligence; and when such defense is established, the plaintiff's action is defeated, not because of any agreement, express or implied, but because his own misconduct was a proximate cause of the injury." The defense of assumption of risk and contributory negligence are so similar that they may fade into each other. The broad line of the difference is to be kept in view, but refined distinctions between them do not advance the administration of the law. Nearly every case of contributory negligence on the part of an employee involves in a general sense some assumption of risk, because in order to be guilty of contributory negligence there must be the risk of apparent danger. When a servant risks this danger in the discharge of duty imposed on him in the course of usual duty, this would be, in an exact sense, a case of assumption of risk. But if he improperly risks the danger, which becomes the proximate cause of the injury, in doing that which is not imposed on him in the course of his usual duty, it would be contributory negligence. Erskine v. Beet SugarCo., 71 Federal Reporter, 270; Baird v. Ry. Co.,61 Iowa, 361; Kilroy v. Fess, 161 Mass. 138; Le Bahn v. R.R. Co., 80 Hun (N.Y.), 116: So Pacific Co. v. Pool,160 U.S. 438. It is to be observed in the case now under consideration, the conductor had complete control of the train. The evidence on this point was to the effect that, so far from the *Page 212 company imposing upon him any duty to carry with his train a dangerous or unsafe car, he was directed by the company to cut any car he regarded in that condition. Under these circumstances, the vital inquiry is, whether he was guilty of contributory negligence, in carrying forward the car, after he discovered the defects, of his own will, without any obligation being imposed upon him by the company to do so. If he did this without good reason, it would not be the assumption of a risk imposed in course of his employment, but carelessness and misconduct on his part in voluntarily carrying with the train a defective car. For this reason I venture to think the defense of contributory negligence was the appropriate one under which this issue should have been submitted to the jury. As we have seen, if the plaintiff discovered defects in the car after he had started on his trip, and they were such as to induce the belief in his mind that the car was dangerous or unsafe, or if they would have made the car appear unsafe or dangerous to a man of ordinary prudence and reason in like situation, and if the plaintiff was in charge of the train, and had the opportunity to drop the car before the accident, he would then be operating a dangerous or unsafe car in his own charge, and if there was a voluntary operation by him of a dangerous or unsafe car producing the injury, or contributing to it as a proximate cause, without which it would not have occurred, the plaintiff could not recover. The portions of the charge above quoted should, in my opinion, have been accompanied by a statement of this principle of law. The fourth exception and subdivisions (c) and (d) of the third exception cover this error, and I think they should be sustained, and a new trial ordered.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE POPE concurs.