Charping v. Toxaway Mills

50 S.E. 186, 70 S.C. 470, 1905 S.C. LEXIS 212
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 14, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 50 S.E. 186 (Charping v. Toxaway Mills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Charping v. Toxaway Mills, 50 S.E. 186, 70 S.C. 470, 1905 S.C. LEXIS 212 (S.C. 1905).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Woods.

The plaintiff was standing on a scaffold working for defendant as a carpenter. The crossbeam of the scaffold broke, and the plaintiff was thrown to the ground and injured. The basis of the action for damages is the alleged failure of the defendant tO' provide the plaintiff, his employee, a safe place to work. The verdict was for the defendant.

1 The plaintiff submits that the Circuit Judge erred in charging- on the subject of assumption of risk, because, as he .insists, this defense was not set up in the answer. In the answer, the defendant first denies the negligence alleg-ed against it in the complaint, and then, in the fourth paragraph, alleges that the accident was due to the plaintiff’s disobedience of the orders of defendant’s foreman, in that he and J. T. Snow, his fellow-servant, were working together, one laying* and the other nailing shingles, and that while doing so they met another workman who was shingling* on the other end of the building*, thus imposing the weight of three men on the scaffold at one point; whereas, the defendant’s foreman had expressly forbidden the plaintiff to work in this way, and had ordered each workman to> lay and nail his own shingles; and that the ■scaffold was built in such manner and of such material as to bear any weight put upon it in compliance with the orders of the foreman. In the fifth paragraph it is further alleged plaintiff, when doing the work knew or ought to- have known, the kind of material used in making the scaffold. These *473 allegations mean, in short, that defendant. assumed all the risks ordinarily incident to the occupation of a carpenter putting on shingles while standing on a scaffold, the nature of which was patent and obvious, and known to plaintiff, and which was safe and sufficient to support him in discharging the duty required of him. This was manifestly a sufficient plea of assumption of risk, even if it be considered necessary in an action by a servant against his master to allege the assumption by the servant of the usual risks incident to his employment. Bodie v. R. R. Co., 61 S. C., 478, 39 S. E., 715; Barksdale v. R. R. Co., 66 S. C., 204, 44 S. E., 743. The Circuit Judge was, therefore, not in error in instructing the jury as to the law of assumption of risk. The fourth, fifth and sixth exceptions, therefore, cannot be sustained.

2 .The plaintiff next insists there was no plea of contributory negligence, and, therefore, the Circuit Judge erred in charging on that subject. The fifth paragraph of the answer, after setting forth the facts above narrated, indicating that the plaintiff assumed the ordinary risks of the work in which he was engaged, alleges that he “carelessly and negligently placed himself directly over one of the crossbeams, whose size and strength he well knew, where a package of shingles had been previously placed and t\Vo men were already standing, and in direct disobedience of orders of defendant’s foreman, who- had ordered that all of said men work singly and alone; which would have distributed the weight on said scaffold, which was some thirty feet in length, and by negligently and carelessly congregating with other workmen directly over said cross-beam, where the additional weight of shingles had been placed, of which plaintiff was well aware, and in direct disobedience of orders of defendant’s foreman, plaintiff caused the cross-beam to break, which was of sound material and of size and strength ordinarily used for such purposes, and of sufficient size and strength to bear any weight put on same in compliance with *474 orders of defendant’s foreman, and thereby contributed to his own injury, if he received any.” The question is whether this allegation of negligence on the part of the plaintiff as contributing to the injury is insufficient to raise the issue of contributory negligence, because not accompanied by an express admission or averment by the defendant that it was also negligent. Such an admission was said to be necessary in Scott v. Ry. Co., 67 S. C., 146; but the majority of the Court concurred only in the result in that case, and the holding that the plea was not sufficiently made was sound, aside from the question here involved, because there contributory negligence was only stated as a conclusion of law without any allegation of the facts, constituting the negligence charged. 5 Ency. P. & P., 12. The question here made is, therefore, an open one in this State. The following is the definition of contributory negligence accepted by this Court as the most satisfactory: “Contributory negligence is a want of ordinary care upon the part of a person injured by the actionable negligence of another, combining and concurring with that negligence and contributing to the injury as a proximate cause thereof, without which the injury would not have occurred.” Cooper v. Ry. Co., 56 S. C., 91, 95, 34 S. E., 16. This definition imports that there must be negligence of the defendant operating with that of the plaintiff to produce the injury, and that if the plaintiff is entirely at fault, one of the elements of the definition, the negligence of the defendant, is wanting. It was held, nevertheless, in Milean v. Ry. Co., 54 S. C., 485, 32 S. E., 539, the defense of contributory negligence may be pleaded in an answer which also< sets up. a general denial of all negligence on the part of the defendant, because any number of inconsistent defenses may be set up in the same pleading. Cohrs v. Fraser, 5 S. C., 351; Code of Civil Procedure, sec. 171. It has been held further,- that where the defendant pleads a g'eneral denial and a further defense by way of confession and avoidance, the admissions of the latter *475 cannot be used by the plaintiff to establish the issues raised by the general denial. Stanley v. Shoolbred, 25 S. C., 181; Gilreath v. Furman, 57 S. C., 293, 35 S. E., 516. It does not follow from all this, however, when the defendant does not believe the injury due to any negligence of his, and so denies all negligence on his part, that, in order to have the benefit of the plea of contributory negligence, he must in the same answer stultify himself by the unqualified assertion that he was negligent, as alleged by the plaintiffs; and when verification is necessary, swear to both 'statements. Such a conclusion would certainly be most repulsive.

It is true, that facts relied on as a defense must be alleged in issuable form, and not set forth as contingent or hypothetical statements. 6 Ency. P. & P., 270; Pom. Code Rem. (4th ed.), 601, note. But even under the technical pleading of the common law, it was propel' to plead the general issue, and in the second place, setting up a defense inconsistent with a general denial, such, for example, as the statute of limitations, refer to the promises set up by the plaintiff as “the several supposed promises or undertakings, in the said declaration mentioned, if any such were or was made,” etc. 3 Chitty on Pleadings, 908 and 956. A similar form of qualified expression is admissible in like cases under the Code of Procedure. Bliss on Code Pleading, secs. 340-341; The State ex rel.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 S.E. 186, 70 S.C. 470, 1905 S.C. LEXIS 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charping-v-toxaway-mills-sc-1905.