Middlebrooks v. Atlanta Metallic Casket Co.

11 S.E.2d 682, 63 Ga. App. 620, 1940 Ga. App. LEXIS 508
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 16, 1940
Docket28550.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 11 S.E.2d 682 (Middlebrooks v. Atlanta Metallic Casket Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Middlebrooks v. Atlanta Metallic Casket Co., 11 S.E.2d 682, 63 Ga. App. 620, 1940 Ga. App. LEXIS 508 (Ga. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

Stephens, P. J.

(After stating the foregoing facts.) A master must use reasonable care and diligence to provide a safe place for his servant to perform the work for which he employs him. Therefore a master should make reasonable provision for his protection against dangers to which he is necessarily exposed while performing such work. Jackson v. Merchants &c. Transportation Co., 118 Ga. 651 (45 S. E. 254); International Cotton Mills v. Webb, 22 Ga. App. 309 (96 S. E. 16). And where the services required by the master of his servant are of a peculiarly dangerous character, it is the duty of the master to make reasonably adequate provisions to protect him from the dangers to which he is exposed in performing such services. 39 C. J. 338; Atlantic Paper & Pulp Corporation v. Bowen, 24 Ga. App. 569 (102 S. E. 36). “A servant can rely upon the performance of the duty of furnishing a safe place in which to work. Danger arising from an unsafe place is not included within the risks assumed by the servant.” Southern Cotton-Oil Co. v. Horton, 22 Ga. App. 155 (95 S. E. 765); Tufts v. Threlkeld, 31 Ga. App. 452, 460 (121 S. E. 120). An ordinary employee or servant does not by virtue of his employment assume the risk incident and peculiar to such employment, arising from latent dangers in connection therewith, of which he has no knowledge. It is only where a danger is obvious, and the work is at *624 tended with a manifest risk which is as easily known to the servant as to the master, that the latter will not be held liable on account of his failure to warn the servant. Tufts v. Threlkeld, supra. As to the latent dangers, incident to the employment, unknown to the servant, of which the master knows or ought to know, the master must give the servant warning in respect thereto. See Code, § 66-301. A servant is not charged with knowledge of latent defects and dangers, and has the right to assume that the master has provided for his safety and care. Bisks which are obvious only to those possessing scientific knowledge are not chargeable to the servant. The ordinary servant, in the absence of a warning by the master, will not be presumed to have knowledge of such scientific principles. 27 L. R. A. (N. S.) 954, and cit. A master “must take into account the properties of such substances as he employs for the purpose of his business and the operation of familiar physical laws upon these substances,” and he is chargeable with knowledge of the fact that fumes or dust given off by various substances used in industrial processes are poisonous to persons who inhale them. Harvey v. Welch, 86 N. H. 72 (163 Atl. 417), and cit.

It is the duty of an employer to warn and instruct his employees and furnish them with means to avoid inhaling fumes which are poisonous or injurious to their health. Jacque v. Lock Insulator Cor., 70 Fed. 2d, 680, 683, and cit. This duty is based upon an assumption of the master’s greater knowledge of the dangers incident to the employment. A master, employing in his business substances and processes of which some one has or should have scientific knowledge, must acquaint the servant with the dangers ascertainable by a knowledge of scientific principles, and to which the servant in his ignorance will be otherwise subjected. Adams v. Grand Rapids Refrigerator Co., 160 Mich. 590 (125 N. W. 724); Allen Gravel Co. v. Curtis, 173 Miss. 416 (161 So. 670), and cit.; 18 R. C. L. 571. “Begarding the duty to warn employees of the hazards of the work, the master is charged with the knowledge of the usual and ordinary dangers and hazards to which he is exposing his employees, and is bound to know the normal condition of his premises, and to know of the nature of the constituents and general characteristics of the substances used in his business, so that he can give directions for the conduct thereof with ordinary *625 safety to his servants performing the work with ordinary care; and particularly is the master chargeable with a knowledge of risks ascertainable only through a knowledge of scientific facts which an uneducated man is not presumed to know; the doctrine that imputes this knowledge to the master is called the 'assumption of skill’ and for the purpose of determining this knowledge the law has a standard which does not vary with the actual capacity of the particular master, and consequently his ignorance is no excuse for a failure to warn.” 39 C. J. 491. In Beard v. Georgian Mfg. Co., 8 Ga. App. 618 (70 S. E. 57), this court said: “Every proprietor of a business is conclusively presumed to have knowledge of the nature of the constituents and general characteristics of the substances and things used in his business.”' Consequently, “Where an employer places and continues an employee for a substantial length of time in the regular performance of work and under conditions which, in the absence of preventive means and precautions, are calculated to engender in the employee a disorder of serious and injurious character, regardless of the name by which the disease is known, it is the duty of the employer to warn . . and to furnish him with reasonably effective means to avoid them, and where as the direct result of failure to perform this duty an employee in the exercise of reasonable care suffers injury through a disorder so contracted he is entitled to recover.” (Citations.) Zajkowski v. American Steel &c. Co., 258 Fed. 9, 11 (2). Decisions of various jurisdictions are in accord in holding that the master must warn his servant of the conditions under which he is employed which are liable to engender disease, and furnish suitable protection from such danger, provided that the master is in a position to have greater knowledge of the danger than the servant. 6 A. L. R. 355, note. As we have seen, the employee is not presumed to have knowledge of hidden dangers which require a scientific knowledge to fully appreciate, neither does he assume the risk thereof. Unless he is warned or undertakes the work with such knowledge, he is not as a matter of law chargeable therewith.

In O’Connor v. Armour Packing Co., 158 Fed. 241, the court, after laying down the well-established principle as to the duty of the master to furnish the servant a safe place to work, said: “The same principle is applicable where the servant is put to work on material that is dangerous to his health or life. The duty of *626 the master in this respect is primary and nonassignable.” In Pigeon v. W. P. Fuller & Co., 156 Cal. 691 (105 Pac. 976), it appeared from the facts that the plaintiff therein was employed, by the defendant company in the manufacture of white lead, and that on entering the employment the plaintiff was not warned or instructed as to the danger connected with his duties, and as a result he suffered from lead poisoning.

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Bluebook (online)
11 S.E.2d 682, 63 Ga. App. 620, 1940 Ga. App. LEXIS 508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/middlebrooks-v-atlanta-metallic-casket-co-gactapp-1940.