Gadsden v. Catawba Power Co.

61 S.E. 960, 80 S.C. 239, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 191
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 24, 1908
Docket6899
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 61 S.E. 960 (Gadsden v. Catawba Power Co.) 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
Gadsden v. Catawba Power Co., 61 S.E. 960, 80 S.C. 239, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 191 (S.C. 1908).

Opinions

April 24, 1908. The opinion of the Court was delivered by *Page 245 Isaiah Gadsden, who sued by his guardian ad litem, Peggy Ross, brought this action against the Catawba Power Company, alleging that the defendant was a corporation, duly incorporated under the laws of the State of South Carolina, and was engaged in the construction, etc., of an electric and water power company and possessed of divers cars, engines, machinery, derricks and railroad, for the moving and transportation of material, and which said instrumentalities were operated by the superintendent, agents and employees of the defendant.

The plaintiff was a minor, employed as a laborer by the defendant, and the plaintiff alleged that his service by the defendant was to work as a laborer during the daytime, but that in the absence of the regular laborer employed for the purpose he, the plaintiff, was put to work as a brakeman and laborer on the railroad operated by the defendant and ordered to go on that special work on the night of June, 1903.

That the plaintiff was ordered and compelled by defendant to work on the train engaged in carrying cars, dirt, etc., back and forth upon the railroad, and while so engaged in such service he was ordered by his superior to change or throw a certain switch, upon the passage of said train and before its return, and while so employed in such service, and without waiting for any signal from him, suddenly and rapidly returned and pushed back and propelled the said cars toward and against the plaintiff, recklessly, wantonly, wilfully and negligently hitting and striking plaintiff, running over him, breaking his legs and arms, bruising and tearing his flesh, injuring his scalp, inflicting serious internal injuries, producing and inflicting upon the plaintiff permanent and increasing injuries, making him a cripple for life, incapacitating him from making a living and causing him great pain and agony.

That there was not on said train sufficient lights nor a sufficient number of men to safely discharge the work and properly to operate the train, nor did the defendant select *Page 246 proper coemployees of plaintiff; the engineer was reckless, intemperate and incompetent; the engine was defective, out of repair and dangerous; that the defendant failed and omitted to instruct the plaintiff in the work to be performed and of the danger of the service; and through these violations of duty, causing or contributing to the above injury, the defendant wilfully, recklessly and negligently damaged and injured the plaintiff to the amount of twenty thousand dollars.

That Peggy Ross is a duly appointed guardian ad litem of the plaintiff.

The answer of the defendant admits its corporate character, and that it was engaged in the construction of the electric power plant and dam, in said county and State, and in said work was using various engines and machines and transporting its material for a short distance upon a tramway or railway of its own, by means of agents and employees, but it denies all the other allegations of said first paragraph.

The answer admits that the plaintiff was employed by the defendant as a laborer, but denies all the other allegations of the second paragraph.

The defendant admits that the plaintiff was employed and working as a switchman upon its said tramway or railway and that he, by his own carelessness and negligence, fell under one of the cars and his leg was broken and arm injured; but all of the other allegations of the third paragraph are denied.

That the fourth and fifth paragraphs of the complaint are denied.

For a further defense, the defendant alleges that even if it was negligent in any manner or respect, as is alleged in the complaint, the plaintiff himself was also negligent and careless, and the plaintiff, by his own negligence in switching the car, attempted to get on it, and in failing to take proper care of himself contributed to and caused his own injury. *Page 247

Further answering, the defendant alleges that the injuries received by the plaintiff were within the risks and hazards of his occupation, and were assumed by him upon his acceptance of employment with the defendant.

And, lastly, that the injuries of the plaintiff were due to and caused by the negligence of his fellow-servants, and the defendant is not liable therefor.

The matter came on to be heard before Judge Prince and a jury. After a volume of testimony was taken and a careful charge to the jury by the Judge, a verdict for five thousand dollars was rendered in behalf of the plaintiff.

And the appeal now comes before this Court upon exceptions alleging error in the ruling and charge of his Honor, George E. Prince, presiding Judge. Let the exceptions for appeal be reported. We will now dispose of the exceptions in their numerical order:

First. The Judge, in the exception here pointed out, indicated that where a master has exercised due care in the selection of his servants, and the servant is then injured by one in the same character of employment with himself, same employment, doing the same work, the master is not then liable for that, because that is one of the risks that the servant assumes in entering upon the employment. The Judge does not restrict and limit the assumption of the risks of the negligence of fellow-servants, to those fellow-servants only who are in the same character of employment, doing the same work. In his charge he was trying to make plain to the jury that fellow-servants must be held to assume the risks of the negligence of fellow-servants; it was this character of coemployees that the jury were considering. This exception is overruled.

Second. The complaint directs the attention to the charge that the conduct of the defendant to the plainiff would enable the latter to recover from the former punitive damages.

This paragraph of the complaint alleges that the defendant wilfully, recklessly damaged the plaintiff; the Circuit Judge was merely laying down the law applicable to such *Page 248 conduct of the defendant. Surely if the charge that the injuries wrought to the person of the plaintiff were only half true, a charge regarding punitive damages would be sustained. After all the testimony laying bare the facts relating to the dreadful wounds upon plaintiff's person were what the defendant had to meet, and it might be said that the defendant joined issue with the plaintiff as to these facts. Thus leaving the responsibility to the jury and not the judge. We can not say, therefore, that there was no issue as to punitive damages, nor do we find that there was any charge upon the facts. Lastly, do we find that the charge of the Judge was an incorrect statement of the law relating to punitive damages. This exception is, therefore, overruled.

Third. No more serious responsibility is placed upon an employer than his duty to control the actions of a fellow being, if that fellow being is an adult and represents himself as knowing what he was doing, for under those circumstances, the master would have the right to assume that the servant realized what he was doing, but where a man is immature or very ignorant of the employment, then it would be the duty of the master to warn him, and if he failed to do so, a question of the master's responsibility is thereby raised to be presented to the jury. This is what we understand to be the meaning of the charge of the Circuit Judge here excepted to. Of course, slight immaturity would not be considered as negligence.

Such questions as these belong to the realm of common sense, and no tribunal is better fitted to the proper solution of such questions than a jury. This exception is overruled.

Fourth.

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Related

Henry v. Norris Bros., Inc.
98 S.E. 197 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1919)
Stanton v. Interstate Chemical Corp.
81 S.E. 660 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1914)

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Bluebook (online)
61 S.E. 960, 80 S.C. 239, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gadsden-v-catawba-power-co-sc-1908.