Levesque v. Clearwater Manufacturing Co.

41 S.E.2d 92, 209 S.C. 494, 1947 S.C. LEXIS 64
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 9, 1947
Docket15904
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 41 S.E.2d 92 (Levesque v. Clearwater Manufacturing 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
Levesque v. Clearwater Manufacturing Co., 41 S.E.2d 92, 209 S.C. 494, 1947 S.C. LEXIS 64 (S.C. 1947).

Opinion

Mr. Associate Justice StukES

delivered the unanimous opinion of the Court.

This action is brought for damages by a former employee against his employer, the defendant, which is engaged in the business of dyeing and bleaching cotton goods, and its factory is referred to as a bleachery and dye plant.

*497 It was alleged in the complaint that there were used poisonous “chemicals, vapors, gases and colorings”, which raised the duty upon the defendant to provide safeguards to prevent the poisons from coming in contact with employees, 'and to make and enforce reasonable rules and regulations in protection of their lives and health, and that they should be warned of the dangers and provided with “gloves, masks and antidotes and such other precautionary measures as may be proper for use by its said employees, who were required by it to work with, in or about said poisonous vapors, chemicals, gases, dyes and colorings, in order to save the employees from the injurious effects of said poisons”. It was further alleged that plaintiff was employed prior to April 21, 1942, at which time he became ill from the effect of the alleged poisonous chemicals, etc., and had to be treated by physicians and hospitalized, suffered pain, itching, and sores, whjch finally unfitted him for military service, where he was also treated by physicians; that he is permanently injured and disabled to follow his former occupation, whereby he is also permanently financially injured and rendered repulsive to others from the resultant appearance and odor. For better understanding of the issues before us the specifications of alleged negligence, recklessness and willfullness contained in the complaint are here reproduced, as follows:

“V. That plaintiff’s injuries and damages aforesaid are due to defendant’s negligence, carelessness, recklessness, will-fullness and utter indifference to the rights of plaintiff and others working in said plant in the following particulars, to wit:

“(a) In that the defendant required plaintiff, who was inexperienced and unfamiliar with the dangers of poisonous chemicals, vapors, gases, dyes and colorings, to work with, in and about the same, without giving plaintiff any notice or warning of the dangers to his health and life, defendant having full and complete knowledge of the dangers incident thereto, and of the fact that plaintiff was not aware of the dangers thereof.

*498 “(b) In that defendant failed in its duty to make, promulgate and enforce reasonable rules and regulations for the governing of its workmen and employees, and particularly the plaintiff, when working in and about its bleachery, dye plant and color shop, which would prevent their coming in physical contact, or takifig into the human system, said poisonous chemicals, vapors, gases, dyes and colorings.

“(c) In requiring its employees, particularly the plaintiff, to perform and work in said unsafe place and surroundings.

“(d) In that defendant failed in its duty to provide any safeguards so as to protect the health and life of its employees, and particularly the plaintiff, in connection with said dangerous work about said poisonous chemicals, vapors, dyes and colorings, and failed to furnish any gas masks, gloves, antidotes, preventatives, or relief of any kind from the poisonous effect of the same, except when occasionally plaintiff,' after he had become affected with the dyes, insisted upon gloves when he was given, at times only, secondhand gloves unfit for use as a preventative measure. Defendant, when plaintiff asked about the gloves fit for use, invariably promised new gloves, but did not provide them.”

The answer of the defendant, now appellant, included a general denial and the following plea of contributory negligence, recklessness and willfullness:

“That defendant alleges that if the plaintiff was damaged in the manner set out in the complaint (which is specifically denied in the first defense hereof), through any negligence, carelessness, recklessness, willfullness, or other indifference to his rights on the part of the defendant, that this defendant alleges that the plaintiff’s own negligence, carelessness, recklessness, willfullness, and utter indifference as to protecting himself, and as to his own safety, in his manner of protecting himself while working in the plant of the defendant, and in his manner of failing to take such precautions as lie should have taken, and especially in his failure to wear rubber *499 gloves, and in his failure to follow his instructions contributed to his damage as a proximate cause thereof, without which the damage complained of in the Complaint would not have occurred.”

The suit was for $5,000.00 damages and resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff of $1,000.00 actual damages. The appeal is only from the refusal of the court to specifically charge the jury three certain requests, or prayers for instructions, asked by the appellant. There were numerous such requests and the court charged the majority, but rejected those which will be set forth in the following separate discussions of them.

The first of the refused requests was No. 5, as follows:

“You are further charged that another specification of negligence set up in plaintiff’s Complaint is that defendant failed in its duty to provide safeguards to protect the health and life of its employees. On the contrary, if you find that the plaintiff was furnished with proper instrumentalities such, for instance, as gloves (which he mentions in his Complaint), and that he failed to use the same, and that the furnishing of the same constituted the furnishing of a proper safeguard on the part of the defendant, then you may disregard this specification of negligence.”

The court commented that it constituted a charge on the facts, which was a proper criticism, and we add that it omitted the element of proximate cause. Plaintiff had testified, in effect, to the entire absence of safeguards or protective devices until he had after suffering injury asked for gloves and was furnished with worn-out ones and that he devised the only protection of his feet and legs by tieing rags of cloth about them. The requested instruction is quite susceptible of the meaning that appellant should have been exonerated if it furnished gloves of any kind as the only safeguard. Such is referred to as “a proper-safeguard” as if it only were necessary in any view of the complaint and *500 testimony. (See par. V(d) of the complaint, supra). Gloves were so highlighted in the pleadings and evidence, whether they were furnished at all to begin with, and whether when furnished they were adequate, that the issue could not have escaped the attention of the jury. The trial judge did not err when he declined this request. The situation is the converse of Finch v. Railway Co., 87 S. C. 190, 69 S. E. 208, where it was said in the opinion: “The constitution does not allow the presiding Judge to state the evidence; much less does it allow him to single out any particular act or omission of the defendant and instruct the jury that if that appears then they may infer that the defendant was negligent. Lampley v. Atlantic C. L. Ry., 71 S. C. 156, 50 S. E. 773; Weaver v.

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Bluebook (online)
41 S.E.2d 92, 209 S.C. 494, 1947 S.C. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levesque-v-clearwater-manufacturing-co-sc-1947.