Appellee was employed by appellants, Pettus & Buford, to work in a cotton gin, and sues them to recover damages for physical injuries received while at work replacing a 'belt which had escaped from a pulley. He alleged in his complaint that apellants negligently fastened a -rope to the pulley and the shaft on which it revolved, and left it there with a loose, knotted end six or eight inches long, and that while he was in the act of replacing the belt his clothing was caught by the knotted end of the rope, throwing him against the shaft and injuring him. It is also alleged that the rope on the pulley was in a dimly lighted place, that its presence there was not observable without close inspection, and that appellants were also guilty of-negligence in failing to warn appellee of the presence of the rope. The testimony adduced at the trial tended to establish the allegations of the complaint, and was sufficient for that purpose. The jury rendered a verdict in favor of appellee, assessing his damages at five hundred dollars.
It is earnestly insisted that the testimony is insufficient to sustain the charge of negligence, but, as already stated, we are of the opinion that it was legally'sufficient to justify the verdict of the jury. It is undisputed that the pulley did' not fit on the shaft, that it had to be tightened with the rope, and that it was unusual to fasten a rope to the pulley and shaft.
There is a conflict in the evidence as to there being a knotted end of the rope extending from the pulley or shaft, but the evidence abundantly establishes the fact, and that it caught appellee’s clothing while he was attempting to replace the belt on the pulley. It is true that no one saw the end of the rope catch the clothing, but from the condition of the clothing wrapped around the shaft and rope and from the position .appellee occupied, according to his testimony, the jury could legitimately draw the inference that the injury occurred in that way. The evidence tends to show that it was not proper to have the pulley fastened in that way, that the rope with the knotted, loose end was situated in a dark place where it could -not be readily observed, that it frequently became necessary for an employee to go there to replace the belt, and that its presence there caused the injury to appellee. This was sufficient to make out a charge of culpable negligence on the part of appellants in the discharge of their duty to their employees in the exercise of ordinary care to provide a safe place where they were required to work.
Error is assigned in the giving of' the following instruction at the request of appellee:
“It was the duty of the defendants to furnish the plaintiff with suitable machinery, tools and appliances and a safe place for him to . work, and the plaintiff had a right to presume that the defendants would do their duty in this respect; so, when directed by proper authority, or when in the performance of his duty, he was required to perform certain services, or to perform them in a certain place, he would be justified in obeying orders, without being chargeable with contributory negligence or with the assumption of the risk in- so doing.”
The chief objection urged to this instruction is that it defines the duty of the master to be to furnish a safe place to the servant, instead of a reasonably safe place. The objection to the instruction was general,' and the attention of the court should have been called to the defect by specific objection.
The court also gave the following at appellant’s request:
“Reasonably safe appliances furnishes the test of the proprietor’s duty to the laborer; and if you find the’shaft and pulley were reasonably safe to those working about it at the time of the accident, you will find for the defendants.”
The two instructions are not in conflict with each other, but the latter explains and qualifies the former. Citizens’ Electric Co. v. Thomas, 75 Ark. 260. The latter explains what is meant by a safe place, and tells the jury that the master fully discharges his duty to the servant if he furnishes reasonably safe appliances.
Both instructions were erroneous in failing to state that the duty of the master would be discharged by exercising ordinary care in providing reasonably safe appliances with which to work, instead of saying that it was the absolute duty to provide such appliances. That is the real defect in the instruction, but no objection has been made either here or below on that ground, and a general objection was not sufficient. St. Louis, I. M. & So. Ry. Co. v. Barnett, 65 Ark. 255.
Instead of objecting on that ground, appellant requested the court to give the instruction quoted above which contains the same defect. Having induced or acquiesced in the error, they cannot complain. Fort Smith L. & T. Co. v. Barnes, 80 Ark. 169.
If, however, the instructions just quoted were calculated to give an erroneous impression of the law of the case, it must have been entirely removed by the following instruction which the court gave:
“The law holds one operating machinery liable for only such mishaps as a reasonably prudent person should anticipate and foresee as a probable result of the condition of the machinery; and, unless you find from- the proof by a preponderance that the rope was the cause of the accident, and that it was upon the shaft and pulley in such a way that those in charge, as reasonably prudent persons, should have foreseen and anticipated the probability of an accident such as happened, you- will find for the defendants.”
The further objection is urged to the instruction first quoted is that it told the jury in effect that, because of the presumption which the servant had the right to indulge that the master had discharged his duty, he could not be guilty of contributory negligence in so doing, nor could he be held to.have assumed the risk. We do not think the instruction could have been so understood by the jury, so far as the question of contributory negligence is concerned, for the court in another instruction given at appellant’s request clearly sübmitted that question to the jury.
As to the question of assumption of risk, it was entirely correct to say that a servant has the right to act upon the presumption that the-master has discharged his duty with reference to providing suitable appliances and a safe place, and that he does no't assume the risk of danger caused by the negligence of the master. Choctaw, O. & G. Rd. Co. v. Jones, 77 Ark. 367; Southern Cotton Oil Co. v. Spotts, 77 Ark. 458.
Objection is made to another instruction given at request of appellee, but we find no error therein.
The record is free from error, and the judgment must be affirmed. It is so ordered.