Latimer v. General Electric Co.

62 S.E. 438, 81 S.C. 374, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 269
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 29, 1908
Docket7027
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 62 S.E. 438 (Latimer v. General Electric 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
Latimer v. General Electric Co., 62 S.E. 438, 81 S.C. 374, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 269 (S.C. 1908).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Jones.

The plaintiff recovered judgment on verdict against defendant for $1,380, as damages for personal injuries resulting from contact with a “live” wire while in the employment of defendant in installing an electrical equipment in Lenora Mills at Yorkville, S. C.

The complaint alleged that the injuries were caused by the negligent and wanton conduct of defendant in several particulars, but plaintiff’s case practically narrowed to the question whether defendant breached its duty to plaintiff in directing him to work in a place of great danger, in close proximity to an electrically charged wire, known to defendant, but of which plaintiff was ignorant, without any warning of such danger. Besides a general denial, defendant plead assumption of risk and contributory negligence. Exceptions are now taken to refusal of defendant’s motion for a non-suit and for a direction of verdict. These motions were made upon the grounds (1) that there was no evidence of negligence in failing to warn plaintiff; (2) that the evidence showed conclusively that plaintiff assumed the risk; (3) that the evidence showed conclusively that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence.

*376 There was some testimony tending to show that plaintiff was about thirty years old, that he had some experience as telephone lineman, had on one or two occasions helped to string up uncharged electric wires or cables, had never worked on wires charged with high voltage of electricity, but knew it was dangerous to come in contact with such wires. Mr. Nye was superintendent for defendant in installing the electrical equipment, and a few days before the injury employed plaintiff as a lineman.

On March 18, 1906, in finishing the work, Mr. Nye directed plaintiff to go on top of the transformers and paint certain parts of the equipment there. There were three transformers, each about five feet high, resting on a brick foundation, and to do the work properly it was necessary for plaintiff to go on top of them. Having finished painting on the third transformer, plaintiff observed a place on one of the others, which had been overlooked, and in attempting to go there to paint it, he raised his body from a stooped position and his back came in contact with a live wire which was suspended from the roof and extended over the transformer, about three and a half or four feet above it, and was connected with the lightning arrester.

The direct current from the power company’s main line was transmitted into each transformer by means of a wire connecting with an oil switch, and when this switch was properly thrown the current was cut out from the transformer, and in such condition there was no danger of contact with a live wire connected with the transformer. The danger of the situation arose from the deadly current flowing through the wire over the transformer connected with the lightning arrester. It appears that the oil switch would not cut the current off this wire.

1 No warning was given plaintiff that this wire was live, but on the contrary, it appears from the evidence, at folio 39, that Mr. Nye, the superintendent, assured plaintiff that he would cut off the oil switch and there would be no danger. At folio 51 this appears: “Did you *377 know there was any high current wire right above you? A. No, sir, not after Mr. Nye told me he had cut off the current and ordered me to work. Q. Did Mr. Nye assure you that there was no danger? A. Yes, sir. Q. Is that what led you to go up there, Mr. Latimer? A. Yes, sir.”

It is true that at the time of the trial plaintiff testified that the wire above him was connected with the lightning arrester and was not deadened by the throwing of the oil switch, but such knowledge after the occurrence is not surprising and does not, of course, conclusively show that he had such knowledge before the occurrence, in view of his testimony to the contrary.

The general principle of law applicable here is thus stated in Owings v. Moneynick, 55 S. C., 483, 487, 33 S. E., 571: “It is the duty of the master, when a servant is set to work at a dangerous place, or with dangerous machinery or other appliances, to warn the servant of the danger to which he is exposed, where he.knows or ought to know that the servant is not aware of the danger; and it is negligence on the part of the master to fail to give such warning in such a case. But where the servant knows the dangerous nature of the situation in which he is required to work, or of the machinery or other appliances which he is to use, such warning would not only be useless but would be absurd.” As there was testimony tending to show that plaintiff did not know that the wire very near which hé was put to work was live and that defendant was aware of such danger and of plaintiff’s ignorance thereof and yet failed to warn plaintiff of danger but assured him of safety, there was evidence of riegligence to go to the jury.

2 Assumption of risk by the plaintiff was not conclusively shown by the testimony. If the plaintiff was ignorant of the fact that the wire was live and acted in reliance upon defendant’s assurance of safety, as he testified, it cannot be affirmed that he assumed the risk. The danger was not obvious but was hidden, as, according to the testimony, no one from mere inspection of the wire could *378 know that a deadly current was flowing through it. Mew v. Ry., 55 S. C., 100, 32 S. E., 828; Elms v. Southern Power Co., 79 S. C., 508. Nor is contributory negligence the only inference of which the testimony is susceptible. If plaintiff was ignorant of the hidden danger and was acting in reliance on the defendant’s promise to cut off the current and assurance of safety, he would naturally and reasonably regard the wire harmless and thus fail to take the necessary precaution to avoid contact with it.

There was therefore no error of law in refusing the motion for non-suit and to direct a verdict for defendant.

3 The remaining exception relates to the following incident during the trial. Plaintiff had testified that previous to going upon the transformer, he asked Mr. Nye if he had got the current cut off, to which Mr. Nye replied that he had not, that he could not get in the telephone office and could not find the manager, that plaintiff then said: “I have just quit work for them and I can get in the office. I know how to operate the switchboard and I could have the current cut off.” To which Mr. Nye replied, “No, that won’t do. It will look like we are intruding on them. We will go down and cut that oil switch out and there will be no danger and we will finish up the work and quit for the day.”

In the argument on the motion for non-suit, Mr. Haynes-worth, attorney for defendant, alluded to this testimony and spoke of the conduct of Mr. Nye in not authorizing an intrusion into the telephone office as very proper, whereupon his Plonor Judge Watts, the jury being present, made this remark: “He (meaning Mr. Nye) was careful not to interfere with other people’s property, but absolutely reckless of the "lives of the people working under him.” Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
62 S.E. 438, 81 S.C. 374, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/latimer-v-general-electric-co-sc-1908.