Judges: Douglas
Filed Date: 5/26/1903
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This case was before us at February Term, 1902, and is reported in
Two other exceptions were to the refusal of the court to direct the jury that if they believed the evidence they should find the (692) first and third issues in favor of the defendant. Owing to the nature of the evidence, these prayers were properly refused. The usual issues were submitted: (1) As to the negligence of the defendant; (2) the contributory negligence of the plaintiff; (3) assumption of risk; and (4) damages. They were all found in favor of the plaintiff under instructions in which we see no error.
There are no exceptions as to the admission or exclusion of testimony, but all relate to the motions to nonsuit and prayers given or refused. Those relating to the respective duties of the plaintiff and defendant to carry such tools as were needed are settled by the former opinion. It was the duty of the master to furnish such tools, and as this was a personal duty, it could not be delegated to a fellow-servant so as to relieve the master. The mere fact of such delegation would create a a vice-principal to that extent. Chesson v. Lumber Co.,
The order to take the tools was not addressed to the plaintiff individually, but to all the hands collectively. If the plaintiff had been told what particular tools he should personally take, and his injury had resulted from his failure to carry such tools, the case would be different. The mere fact of his attempting to do the work without such tools was not in itself an assumption of the resulting risk, and this was practically held in our former opinion. Holding to the contrary would in practical effect nullify our decisions requiring the master to furnish proper tools, as in all cases the negligence of the defendant would be then neutralized by the plaintiff's implied assumption of the risk. The failure of the master to furnish reasonably safe machinery and proper tools is regarded as continuing negligence, which becomes the proximate cause of the injury. This is one of the basic (693) principles in the important cases of Greenlee v. R. R.,
In cases where the defendant fails to perform its duty in furnishing safe and suitable appliances, the plaintiff will not be held to have assumed the risk in undertaking to perform a dangerous work, unless the act itself is obviously so dangerous that in its careful performance the inherent probabilities of injury are greater than those of safety. This is in analogy to the rule laid down in the following cases: Hinshaw v. R. R.,
Referring again to the argument that the principle of this decision, if carried out to its fullest extent, would apply to the ordinary work upon a farm, we can only repeat what we have already said, that "We feel compelled to carry out a principle only to its necessary and logical results, and not to its farthest theoretical limit in disregard of other essential principles." Chappell v. Ellis,
This case was quoted and approved in R. R. v. Herrick,
Affirmed.
Cited: Hicks v. Mfg. Co.,
Cogdell v. Southern Railway Co. ( 1901 )
Orr v. Southern Bell Telephone Co. ( 1902 )
Missouri Pacific Railway Co. v. MacKey ( 1888 )
Coley v. North Carolina Railroad ( 1901 )
Hinshaw v. Raleigh & Augusta Air Line R. R. ( 1896 )
Chicago, Kansas & Western Railroad v. Pontius ( 1895 )
St. Louis & San Francisco Railway Co. v. Mathews ( 1897 )
Wright v. Southern Railway Co. ( 1898 )
Chesson v. John L. Roper Lumber Co. ( 1896 )
Hicks v. . Manufacturing Co. ( 1905 )
Young v. Champion Fiber Co. ( 1912 )
Murdock v. Carolina, Clinchfield & Ohio Railroad ( 1912 )
Deligny v. Tate Furniture Co. ( 1915 )
Hines v. Rowland Lumber Co. ( 1917 )
Lynch v. Carolina, Clinchfield & Ohio Railway Co. ( 1913 )
Yarborough v. F. C. Geer Co. ( 1916 )
Buchanan v. Cranberry Furnace Co. ( 1919 )
Walters v. Durham Lumber Co. ( 1914 )
Lloyd v. Southern Railway Co. ( 1914 )