DocketNumber: 8538
Citation Numbers: 78 S.E. 24, 94 S.C. 410, 1913 S.C. LEXIS 158
Judges: Fraser, Woods
Filed Date: 4/30/1913
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is an action for personal injury. The plaintiff alleges that he was flagman on a freight train of the defendant. That the train stbpped at Fanford, a station on defendant’s railroad, and that as the said train started, the conductor of said train gave the defendant an order, when the train was in motion, to- board the last car on said train while the train was in motion; that the plaintiff was subject to the orders of the conductor; that the plaintiff met the caboose (the last car) and believing that he could board it safely, endeavored to- board it from the right side and caught the grip iron in front of the rear platform of the caboose and placed his left foot on the bottom step of the caboose, but said step was old, badly worn and was very sleek, as defendant then and there well knew, and was defective and insecure for that reason, and the plaintiff’s foot slipped off said step and he was thrown to the ground and injured by the train — his leg was broken. Negligence, recklessness and wantonness were alleged on the part of the defendant.
Negligence was alleged (a) in that the plaintiff was ordered to board a moving train, knowing it to- be moving; (b) In- failing to provide a safe place to work, in that the step was old, worn and very sleek and for that reason defective and unsafe; (c) In failing to- stop the train until the . plaintiff could board said train. The defendant answered, pleading assumption of risk and contributory negligence.
1. “There is no testimony tending to establish actionable negligence as a proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury.”
Appellant claims, however, that there was no- evidence that the step was originally defective, and if it became unsafe in the use the master is not liable, and bases this claim on Martin v. Royster Guano Co., 72 S. C. 342; 51 S. E. 680. That case is not so broad as that. In the Martin case the servant was furnished a safe place to work and helped to make an excavation that caved in and injured him. It was the servant’s own act that produced the injury. The Martin case is not authority for the proposition that if a master once furnishes a safe place and suitable machinery, he is absolved from further duty to maintain them in safety. It is claimed that inasmuch as the step did not break, the defendant is not liable.. The breaking of machinery is not the test of liability. The test is, was the defendant guilty
2. “The testimony shows conclusively that plaintiff’s injury was due to- one of the ordinary risks incident to- his employment, which he assumed on entering the employment.”
Appellant says, “if he had put his foot on the step for a sufficient distance and not simply caught on the ball or toe, he would not har^e slipped.” To- catch “on the ball or toe” may be the most approved and safest method so far as this Court can know. That was a question for the jury and this ground cannot be sustained.
4. “It was error in- his Honor to- allow the jury to consider the specifications of negligence contained in subdivisions a. and c. when there was not a particle of testimony tending to support the same.”
The judgment of this Court is that the judgment appealed from be affirmed.