McGee v. Clearwater Mfg. Co.

53 S.E.2d 393, 214 S.C. 495, 1949 S.C. LEXIS 49
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMay 12, 1949
Docket16216
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 53 S.E.2d 393 (McGee v. Clearwater Mfg. 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
McGee v. Clearwater Mfg. Co., 53 S.E.2d 393, 214 S.C. 495, 1949 S.C. LEXIS 49 (S.C. 1949).

Opinion

SeukES, Justice.

The plaintiff in this action, now respondent,, recovered verdict and judgment against the defendant-employer, now appellant, in the amount of $1500 upon her complaint in which it was alleged, in substance, that in August 1944 as an apprentice or learner she was operating a yarder machine in defendant’s textile finishing plant and the machine was unsafe and defective in stated particulars whereby her right hand was drawn into the blades of the machine and one finger severed and others injured which necessitated hospitalization, surgery and extended medical treatment. The specifications of alleged negligence were the failure of defendant to furnish plaintiff a safe place and appliances in and with which to work and the failure to warn and instruct plaintiff in the operation of the machine, etc. The answer contained a general denial and the allegation that if the defendant was negligent, the plaintiff was reckless and wanton in failing in her work as an inspector to discover the danger and avoid the injury, which recklessness and wantonness contributed to her injury as a proximate cause.

The machine, called yarder, rapidly feeds cloth before the operator over a table where 42 inches in length of it is visible at once and at the end of the machine nearest the operator a mechanism called the blades folds the cloth in one yard widths as fast as it comes. The cloth travels at the rate of 120 yards and more per minute which requires quick operation of the blades. It is the duty of operator to examine the cloth as it passes and detect defects which must be marked *498 by throwing a scrap of cloth, called a flag, at the location of every defect, which attracts the attention of a subsequent inspector.

Defects are commonly of great variety and are described as holes, missing color, oil, white scrimp, misclean, out of fit (where the pattern is out of line), grey black scrimp, snap, stick in, hair line, color streak, color spot, roller scratches, torn selvage, and chatter (where the lines come horizontal in the printing). The cloth in process at the time of the accident was print which means that it was colored and contained figures. Naturally holes and other defects are more difficult to discover in it than in plain or white cloth.

In addition, an essential duty of the operator of the yarder machine, the work of which plaintiff was doing at the time in question, is that the selvage or edges of the cloth must be lightly held between the thumbs and forefingers, or otherwise in the hands, in order to guide the speedily moving cloth into the blades so it will not twist or become otherwise disarranged, It was in the performance of this duty, fairly deducible from the evidence, that plaintiff’s right thumb was caught in a small, unseen hole in the selvage of the fabric, as alleged in the amended complaint, and her hand was drawn into the blades and injured before she was able to stop the operation of the machine although she testified that she tried to do so by application of the brakes with her foot. The blades continued to operate and beat upon her entrapped hand until the brakes were successfully applied by another nearby employee.

It was established by the evidence, or inferable from it, that plaintiff, who was then employed in another department of the mill, applied to one in authority for employment as a yarder in order to earn the higher wage of fifty cents per hour as a learner and she was told by the overseer or boss of the yarder department that,in view of her inexperience she would be taught her new work, she testified over a period of three weeks, but because of the *499 absence through illness of another yarder, she was “turned loose” after three or four days. The accident happened about the fourteenth work day thereafter. There is no need to recount the testimony in further detail because we agree with the trial judge that the evidence was sufficient to carry the issue to the jury upon the claim of negligence with respect to the insufficiency of the instruction of plaintiff by the master as to the dangers of her new employment and the safeguards which she should take to avoid them. This renders unnecessary examination of the evidence with respect to the other specifications of negligence which were submitted to the jury.

The defendant employer elected not to come within the terms of the Workmen’s Compensation law and it is thereby subject in this action to the provision of Sec. 7035-17, Code of 1942, as follows: “An employer who elects not to operate under this article shall not, in any suit at law instituted by an employee subject to this article to recover damages for personal injury or death by accident, be permitted to defend any such suit at law upon any or all of the following grounds :

“(a) That the employee was negligent.”

In this situation defendant resorts to the authority of Nuckolls v. Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co., 192 S. C. 156, 5 S. E. (2d) 862. There, however, the plaintiff was the acting store manager of defendant and it was his duty to keep reasonably safe the place of employment where the defect existed which caused the injury. Manifestly it is inapplicable in this case. With respect to' the charge Of negligence that plaintiff was insufficiently instructed in the dangers of her employment would presuppose the duty upon plaintiff to instruct and warn herself in reference to matters in which she was admittedly ignorant at the beginning of her new employment. ■ This, we think, demonstrates the present irrelevancy of •■the cited decision. '

The rule of duty of an employer to warn and instruct an inexperienced employée concerning hazards of the employment is of frequent application. 35 Am: Jur. 575 et seq., *500 Master and Servant, Sec. 145; Jennings v. Edgefield Mfg. Co., 72 S. C. 411, 52 S. E. 113; Elms v. Southern Power Co., 79 S. C. 502, 60 S. ,E. 1110; Latimer v. General Electric Co., 81 S. C. 374, 62 S. E. 438. A very similar case to this was Shaw v. Arkwright Mills, 80 S. C. 567, 61 S. E. 1018, 1019, in which was said: “It was very evident that this was a case where there was a failure of the master to do his full duty to this neophyte. This court has so frequently of late rendered its decision on the duties of a master to his young servant that it deems it hardly proper to cite the numerous authorities bearing on this question.” This was before enactment of the statute which we have cited and the defenses of contributory negligence and assumption of risk were available to the defendant, in that case.

It is peculiarly within the province of the jury to con-elude, upon conflicting evidence as here, as to the sufficiency of the instructions and warnings. Certainly the record of this case is susceptible of more than one reasonable inference, which removes the verdict from the proper sphere of this court in appeals in law cases.

This conclusion necessitates the overruling of the exceptions relating to the refusal of the trial court to grant appellant’s timely motions for nonsuit, directed verdict and judgment non obstante veredicto.

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Bluebook (online)
53 S.E.2d 393, 214 S.C. 495, 1949 S.C. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgee-v-clearwater-mfg-co-sc-1949.