Citation Numbers: 80 S.E. 173, 164 N.C. 249, 1913 N.C. LEXIS 42
Judges: Walker
Filed Date: 12/3/1913
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/11/2024
After stating the case: It seems clear to us that the question of defendant's negligence was one for the jury. There is but one exception, that the court denied the motion for a nonsuit. We must, therefore, view the evidence most favorably for the plaintiff, (251) and if there is any phase of it which, if found by the jury, entitles him to recover, it presents a case for them, instead of one for a nonsuit.
We have said in numerous decisions that the master owes the duty to his servant, which he cannot satisfy neglect, to furnish him with proper tools and appliances for the performance of his work, and he *Page 201
does not meet fully the requirement of the law in the selection of them, unless he uses the degree of care which a person of ordinary prudence would exercise, having regard for his own safety, if he were supplying them for his own use. Marks v. Cotton Mill,
We have said that the rule which calls for the care of the prudent man is, in such cases, the best and safest one for adoption. It is perfectly just to the employee and not unfair to his employer, and is but the outgrowth of the elementary principle that the employee, with certain statutory exceptions, assumes the ordinary risks and perils of the service in which he is engaged, but not the risk of his employer's negligence. When the injury to him results from one of the ordinary risks or perils of the service, it is the misfortune of the employee, and he must bear the loss, it being damnum absque injuria; but the employer must take care that ordinary risks and perils of the employment are not increased by reason of any omission on his part to provide for the safety of his employee. To the extent that he fails in this plain duty, he must answer in damages to his employee for any injuries the latter may sustain which are proximately caused by his negligence, and not by the negligence of the employee. Marksv. Cotton Mill, supra. These principles are familiar, and the difficulty generally arises in their application; but we do not think there is any in this case.
Here the employee wanted to use a safe implement, one which (252) he had been using for some time with safety and efficiency, and the employer interfered and compelled him, under a menace of discharge (for the plaintiff, as it appears, knew and realized the consequence of disobedience), to use one which was not so well adapted to the work and was more dangerous to the employee, who was proximately injured thereby. This makes out, at least, a case for the jury.
It appeared in Simpson v. R. R.,
In Whitson v. Wrenn,
Not so here, but the contrary. It is the converse of that case. The servant selected a safe method of doing the work, and the master ordered him to desist and do it in a dangerous way. The injury was, therefore, caused by the master's fault, and fixes him with responsibility for it. There is no pretense that the servant was guilty of any contributory negligence, and could not be, under the facts. Orr v. Telephone Co., supra.
We have just decised [decided] a case at this term, which is analogous to the one at bar (Breeden v. Manufacturing Co.,
No error.
Cited: Lloyd v. R. R.,
Warwick v. Lumberton Cotton Oil & Ginning Co. , 153 N.C. 262 ( 1910 )
Simpson v. Southern Railway Co. , 154 N.C. 51 ( 1910 )
Breeden v. . Manufacturing Co. , 163 N.C. 469 ( 1913 )
Dorsett v. Clement-Ross Manufacturing Co. , 131 N.C. 254 ( 1902 )
Witsell v. . R. R. , 120 N.C. 557 ( 1897 )
Mercer v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad , 154 N.C. 399 ( 1911 )
Orr v. Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co. , 132 N.C. 691 ( 1903 )