Cherokee Brick Co. v. Hampton

84 S.E. 328, 16 Ga. App. 53, 1915 Ga. App. LEXIS 500
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 3, 1915
Docket5746
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 84 S.E. 328 (Cherokee Brick Co. v. Hampton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cherokee Brick Co. v. Hampton, 84 S.E. 328, 16 Ga. App. 53, 1915 Ga. App. LEXIS 500 (Ga. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Russell, C. J.

Alonzo Hampton brought suit in the city court of Macon against the Cherokee Brick Company, a corporation, for $5,000 damages on account of the loss of his left hand and other injuries alleged to have been caused by the explosion of a muzzle-loading shotgun which he was instructed by the defendant’s superintendent to discharge into one of the brick-kilns of its plant. The discharge of the gun into the kilns was for the purpose of expelling accumulations of soot from the kiln. The plaintiff himself testified that he was unfamiliar with guns of the muzzle-loading type, and had not used this particular gun before that day; that after he had loaded the gun, and the superintendent had rammed down the wadding, he protested to the superintendent of the company that the gun was unsafe, and that he was afraid to discharge it; that the superintendent assured him the gun was safe, and insisted upon his firing it into one of the kilns, the door of which was opened for that purpose by the superintendent, and when he discharged it the barrel eiploded, blowing away his left hand. The evidence is in conflict upon some of the material points, but the jury, by their verdict, gave preference to the testimony in favor of the plaintiff, and returned a verdict for $2,500 in his favor.

1. Giving the testimony for the plaintiff, as we must, the preference accorded to it by the jury, it can not be said that the verdict is contrary to law or evidence; and a review of the various special assignments of error presented by the record satisfies us that the trial judge committed no error in overruling the motion for a new trial. In its answer to the plaintiff’s petition, the defendant admitted that he received the injuries and suffered pain as alleged, and that he was in its employ, but all the charges of negligence were denied. The gist of the defense, as stated by the learned counsel [56]*56for the plaintiff in error, was as follows: that the injuries resulted, from the plaintiff’s own negligence and the fact that he voluntarily and without knowledge or permission of the defendant abandoned the scope of his employment when he got the gun and overloaded it; that the gun exploded because it was overloaded, and the defendant had no notice that it was deficient, if it was deficient, and the constant use of the gun showed it was not defective. It was further insisted that if the gun was defective, the plaintiff had as much notice of its condition as the defendant. It is further insisted that because the plaintiff had overloaded the gun, he was bound by his own act; and that Goforth, the defendant’s superintendent, told him to shoot it because he had overloaded it, and it was his duty, rather than that of any one else, to shoot it. As we have already stated, all the contentions of the defendant as to the facts of the case were disputed by testimony in behalf of the plaintiff, which unequivocally contradicted the defendant’s theory of the case, and argument upon these propositions is fruitless, because upon these points the finding of the jury is conclusive. The only question this court is empowered to determine is whether the circumstances of the occurrence in which the plaintiff lost his arm, as related by him, precluded a recovery as a matter of law. He stated that he was wholly ignorant of the use of guns; that he loaded the gun as directed by Goforth, the defendant’s superintendent; that after he loaded' it he was afraid to shoot it, and would not shoot it until the superintendent ordered him to “poke it up there and shoot it,” after having twice assured him that the gun was all right and would not hurt him. The plaintiff swore that Goforth himself rammed the wadding down on the powder, and when the plaintiff told him he was afraid to shoot it, the superintendent replied, “That is all right. Take it and shoot it.” The plaintiff had never seen a gun like it before, and testified, “I never had any dealings with a muzzle-loading shotgun in -my life.” Another witness, testifying in behalf of the defendant, swore that the defendant’s superintendent, Mr. Goforth, said to the plaintiff, “You have fooled around and overloaded this gun. You put it in there and you have got to shoot it out.” Mr. Goforth himself admitted that when the plaintiff called his attention to the load in the gun and told him that the wadding was hung and the gun overloaded, he replied, “All right, you are the man that loaded it, and you will have to [57]*57shoot it.” In view of the fact that there is no dispute that Goforth told Hampton to shoot the guñ, the court did not err in refusing to charge the jury, as requested, that the plaintiff could not recover if Goforth did not believe or know that the gun was dangerously overloaded. The principle upon which the defendant seems to rely for its defense is, that the contributory negligence of the plaintiff was so great that he can not recover, and it is further argued that the plaintiff, having assumed the risk, can not recover for the consequences of his own act, and further that his act was so rash as entirely to defeat his action. The plaintiff having assumed the ordinary risk of his employment, and it appearing undisputed, in the evidence, that the method by which the defendant cleaned the soot from its brick-kilns was by the discharge of a gun into the openings of the kiln, the plaintiff presumptively assumed the risk of shooting a safe gun furnished by the master, and was bound to use ordinary care in the use of this instrumentality, or not to use it at all if it' was apparent that the gun was too defective to be safely used. Ordinarily the plaintiff would have assumed the risk dependent upon improper loading upon his part; for if the accident was the proximate result of the gun’s being overloaded by him, of course he could not recover, but if the gun was overloaded according to the master’s directions, and the master supplied the defective and dangerous gun, and then, after furnishing and loading this gun and assuring the plaintiff that it was all right to go ahead, and telling him to “poke it up there and shoot it,” we are of the opinion that the plaintiff would be entitled to recover, unless it was shown that the plaintiff knew or had good reason to know that the gun was defective, knew that the load with which it was charged was excessive for that particular gun, and shot the gun upon his own judgment, conscious of the risk which might be expected to attend an overcharge of a gun of that make or kind, and conscious also of the danger attending a discharge of the particular load from the particular gun. In other words, the plaintiff might recover if he knew that it would ordinarily be dangerous to discharge as large a load of powder from such guns as he was acquainted with, if any, but did not know it would be dangerous, and from the assurance of his master had been induced to believe it would not be dangerous, to discharge the load which his master put into this gun, with whose qualities his master was acquainted, and which his [58]*58master assured him was safe. Under the proof, the assumption of risk by the servant, which is ordinarily to be implied, was abrogated by a distinct order of the defendant’s superintendent to use the gun as ordered by him, with the implied assurance that the instrumentality thus employed was safe. As a general rule, the servant assumes the ordinary risks of his employment, including the chances of being injured by the instrumentality furnished by the master for the prosecution of the work at hand.

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Bluebook (online)
84 S.E. 328, 16 Ga. App. 53, 1915 Ga. App. LEXIS 500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cherokee-brick-co-v-hampton-gactapp-1915.