Gunter v. . Wicker

85 N.C. 310
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 5, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 85 N.C. 310 (Gunter v. . Wicker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gunter v. . Wicker, 85 N.C. 310 (N.C. 1881).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

The plaintiff, employed as foreman in running the steam saw mill of the defendants, and who had been in their service for five months, among other duties assigned, was required to oil the machinery after cutting up the third log, an'd also of every one thousand shingles made. The defendant Wicker, one of the partnership proprietors and the general manager of the business under whose control the plaintiff worked, was personally attending to the sawing. The third log had been cut and the machinery stopped, when the plaintiff as he was accustomed to do, and) had before done with defendant’s knowledge and without objection or caution from the latter, entered into the fly wheel, for greater convenience in doing bis work, and was in the act of oiling the machinery when the defendant without notice or warning turned on steam and set the mill in motion, by means whereof the plaintiff sustained personal injury for which the action is brought. If the engine .had been, put upon a dead centre, it could only have been *311 -started by applying a direct lever force, and tbe plaintiff’s position in the fly wheel would have been entirely safe, and ■the turning-on of steam wou-ld have been unattended with damage. There was some conflict in the testimony of the parties, but the verdict upon the issues presupposes the substantial facts recited.

The exceptions we are required t© consider are to an instruction asked and refused, and to that given in response to the defendants’ request. The court was asked to charge the jury if they believe the plaintiff knew how t© secure his absolute safety by putting the fly wheel upon a dead center, and if be could easily and quietly do so, and neglected thus to secure his own safety, his failure to do so amounted to such contributory negligence as to debar a recovery. Instead of this, the jury were directed that if the plaintiff was instructed to arrest the motion of the machinery on a dead eenter, when the oiling was to be done, or if sueh was the custom of the mill, and the plaintiff neglected to do so, his failure would be contributory negligence, and the verdict should be for the defendants.

The other instructions as to the liability of the principal for an injury suffered by one from the negligence of the other co-servants and co-employees, acting under one common superior, have no application, since the damages result from negligence imputed to the proprietor and manager, to whom the plaintiff was subordinate.

We think the jury were properly guided in the directions ■under which their verdict was rendered.

While there -is great difficulty in extracting from the numerous adjudications of the courts ' any clear and distinct -principle or formula, determining when the co-operating .agency of the plaintiff so directly contributes to the .result, .as to deprive him of remedy against the other party to whose negligence the injury is attributable, we have not much difficulty in passing -upon the question of the defendant’s *312 responsibility in the present case. The rule is thus laid down by a recent author: “ Notwithstanding the previous negligence ©f tho plaintiff, if at the-time when the injury was committed, it might have been avoided by the exercise of reasonable eare and prudence on the part of the defendant an action will lie for damages.” Davis v. Mann, 10 M. and W., (Exc.), 545.

‘ The negligence of the plaintiff,in- order to bar a recovery, must have been a proximate cause of the injury complained of.” Thomp. Neg., 1157, §8 ,- 1151, §5„

Again the- rule is thus declared by this court: “ If tile-plaintiff’s negligence contributed, directly to the injury, it is well settled that he cannot recover;, but it is equally well1 settled that when he is remotely and unconsciously negligent, he is entitled to redress for a-1.1- injuries inflicted by an» other, when by the latter the injuries could have- been avoided by reasonable diligence.”' Doggett v. R. & D. R. R. Co., 78 N. C., 305.

There mu-st be wdiat is sometimes called a “casual connection” between the neglects-of the parties, which concurring; at the time produce the injury, to exempt the defendant, from, the consequences-of-his own.” Wharf. Neg.,. §302.

/Let us- apply the rule to the facts of the present case; /Whatever want of care for his own safety the plaintiff may have manifested in occupying a place-of peril in the wheel while doing his work, no- harm would have- come- to him but for the hasty and- inconsiderate act of the defendant in-starting the mill without signal, warning, or himself looking to see, as he could have done,- whether the oiling, then to-be done, was finished, and the plaintiff had-retired from his position. This case and attention would- have preveny..f,nd-the-accident, and to their absence it must be attributed.. The place of peril assumed by the plaintiff in doing his work (and his habit was known to the defendant) not only? did not excuse the defendant,.but imposed upon him. greater *313 diligence and a higher duty in examining to see if the way was-clear for a resumption of the sawing.. ^Th-e plaintiff’s exposure of his person was not a cause, but a condition which rendered the injury possible and actual, as the result-of the absence of the caution which was imposed upon the-defendant in consequence.)

There is no error,, and the judgment must be affirmed..

No error. Affirmed..

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85 N.C. 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gunter-v-wicker-nc-1881.