(After stating the foregoing facts.) The defendant was altering the roof to its boiler house. The plaintiff (a minor and inexperienced), while working among the rafters, fastened one end of a piece of timber, and, in order to reach the point where the other end had to be nailed, attempted to walk along a narrow beam. In doing so he came to a brace which ran from the beam diagonally to the roof. The brace appeared to be fastened. In fact it was insecure. In endeavoring to pass around it he caught hold of the brace. It fell, and he with it. In the suit for the resulting personal injuries, it was charged that the master was negligent in maintaining the brace in this insecure condition, and in ordering the plaintiff to this work without warning him of the danger, or notifying him that the timber was loose. It is alleged that the plaintiff was ignorant of the condition of the brace, and by the exercise of ordinary care could not have discovered it, but that the company knew or ought to have known of the dangers and defects mentioned.
1 — 5. The master is responsible for the consequences of his negligence. But he is not an insurer; nor is he liable absolutely and at all events for every injury which is sustained by his employee. The master is not bound to exercise that extraordinary diligence which necessarily would be demanded if he were obliged to make every instrumentality safe for any and every use to which it might suddenly and unexpectedly be applied. His duty and diligence are primarily to be decided by considering whether he has furnished an appliance or. instrumentality reasonably safe and suitable for the purpose for which it is intended or might naturally be expected to be used. This duty may extend beyond the mere furnishing of the article, and involve the obligation of inspection and maintenance. So that in such cases he may be liable not only for injuries occasioned by defects of which he knew, but by those of which he ought to have learned in making the required inspection. In the performance of the absolute duty to furnish an employee with suitable appliances, and to warn him of dangers connected with the employment, the master can not escape from responsibilities by negligent ignorance. Civil'Code, §2611. But the liability then springs out
Here, from the petition and the diagram attached to it, it is perfectly evident that the brace was not intended as a hand-hold, but only to assist in supporting the roof. If, in consequence of the brace being unfastened, the roof had fallen and injured the plaintiff, or persons lawfully in the house, it would have been competent to show- that the owner had not furnished a proper instrumentality, or was negligent in its maintenance, or was negligent in failing to know of the insecurity. All these facts would have been admissible in determining whether he had performed his duty to those who had a right to rely on his furnishing a safe roof. The brace was intended to support a roof. It must be kept safe for that purpose. But when it was suddenly applied to another use, and proved unsuited to that use, the owner can not be held responsible for its failure to serve the new purpose to which it was unexpectedly put. So to hold would be to rule that he was in the first instance bound to exercise extraordinary diligence. If, therefore, the brace was not intended- as a hand-hold,the company can not be charged with negligence because, while gravity or pressure enabled it to support the roof without a fast-r ening, it failed to carry the weight of a man pulling at another angle. And if, relatively to the plaintiff, there was no duty to furnish it as a hand-hold, there was no negligence in failing for two years to inspect, to see whether it was suited as a hand-hold. “ The mere fact that an appliance happens to be placed where it can be used for the performance of the work which the injured servant undertook to do with it does not warrant the inference that the master intended that he should use it as he did, or the inference that he was in fault in not knowing that he was likely to do so. Any other rule would involve the consequence that every master who leaves any implement upon his premises, which his servants can not safely use for every purpose which suits their convenience, sets a trap for them.” 1 Labatt’s Master & Servant, §26. The authorities on which the defendant in error relies do
6. Nor is the allegation that the company “ knew or ought to have known of the defects and dangers mentioned above,” by itself, sufficient to save the case. For, construing the petition as it must be construed, — most strongly against the pleader, — it does not charge actual knowledge, but only amounts to the alternative allegation of implied notice. And even in that respect it states no fact, but seems rather to be a conclusion resulting from the further allegation that the brace had remained unfastened for more than two years. Compare Allen v. Augusta Factory, 82 Ga. 79. At most the petition can be treated only as charging implied notice. Southern Ry. Co. v. Bunt (Ala.), 32 Sou. 508. Where the master is under an absolute duty to furnish appliances suitable for the use for which they are intended, or to warn of the dangers attendant upon the employment, he can not hide behind the want of knowledge which he should have acquired. In such cases ignorance itself may bé negligence. Civil Code, §2611. But the authorities are not uniform in declaring when implied notice will be sufficient to charge one .with negligence. All recognize that there may be instances in which only actual knowledge will serve to impose a liability. Ignorantly to send
The master, therefore, not being chargeable by law with the knowledge of the dangers which may arise from its applicátiou to a new use, does not come within the rule as to implied notice. Nor does the law say that he ought to have known that the brace was unsuited as a hand-hold. It takes some new fact to raise a new duty, and impose a new liability for the damage occasioned by the new use. That new fact is knowledge, not only of the condition of the brace, but that the plaintiff would use it in the prosecution of his work. If, in ignorance of the danger, the master sends an employee to labor, his responsibility is measured by the application of the rules relating to the use of appliances in a way and for a purpose not intended But if he knows of the danger, — knows that there is a trap, — and yet sends the employee unwittingly into the trap, he is not only morally guilty, but civilly liable. And of course the master might be liable even in those cases where he is not morally guilty, for he might be chargeable if his agent Bad knowledge of the trap. And even where there was no actual knowledge of the danger, yet if there was actual knowledge of facts suggesting the existence of danger, and leading a prudent man to make an inspection, he could not fail to follow up the inquiry suggested
That the allegation that the master “ ought to have known of the defect” is not sufficient to charge him with negligence under such circumstances was involved in the cases cited from 1 Labatt’s Master & Servant, 60. And so, too, in Quirouet v. Ala. Great Southern R. Co., cited above, it appears from the original record that the petition averred that the “ defendant knew or was in duty bound to know” of the defects in the standard. In Morrison v. Fiber Co., 70 N. H. 406, the plaintiff was working near a conveyor, which was covered with canvas. “ The defendants knew.how this part of their elevator was covered, but did not tell the plaintiff that the covering was canvas.” He thought it was covered with a plank, and, while moving a heavy object, stepped upon the canvas and was injured. In the course of the opinion the court says: “ The case does not show that the defendants either intended for the plaintiff to use this elevator as he did, or knew, or were in fault in not knowing, that he was likely to do so. A person is not in fault for not knowing particular facts, unless circumstances exist which "would put a man of average prudence upon inquiry. . . The plaintiff’s situation would have been no different if the defendants . . had set him to paint the mill, and he had hung his stage from a gutter which they knew was insecurely fastened, but which he supposed was secure. . . Although it is a master’s duty to set no trap for his
Cited by plaintiff in error: 90 Ga. 491; 93 Ga. 570 ; 83 Ga 491; 111 Ga. 315 ; 118 Ga. 795 ; 102 Ga. 586; 97 Ala. 220 98 Mass. 572 ; 160 Mass. 457; 165 Mass. 443; 70 N. H. 406
Cited by defendant in error: 118 Ga. 581; 111 Ga. 149; 97 Ga. 719; 83 Ga. 709; 155 Mass. 584; 4 L. R. A. 420; 117 N.Y. 566; 153 Mass. 356; 105 Ind. 29 ; 162 Ill. 447; 7 Houst. 556; 44 Cal. 187; 25 Ala. 659 ; 92 Ga. 95; 94 Ga. 107; 50 Mich. 70; 102 Mo. 213; 92 Ga. 399; 71 Ga. 407 (17); 116 Ga. 427; 72 Pac. 289; 204 Pa. 41 ; 93 N. W. 177; 31 W. Va. 146; 9 Fed. 861; 84 Mich. 676; 105 Ind. 155 ; 66 N. E. 694; 1 Labatt’s Master & Servant, §§ 28, 440 (c), pp. 273, 298, 1247, 65; Bailey’s Master & Servant, 122.
Judgment reversed.