Nelling v. Industrial Manufacturing Co.

78 Ga. 260
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 23, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 78 Ga. 260 (Nelling v. Industrial Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nelling v. Industrial Manufacturing Co., 78 Ga. 260 (Ga. 1886).

Opinion

Hall, Justice.

This was an action by a mechanic against his employer for persona] injuries, sustained in removing and placing in proper position a machine on which he had been working out of doors, and upon which he was about to work again when it had been removed into the house and was properly adjusted so as to be used. It fell when he was endeavoring to place staves under its legs so that the treadle by which it was run might have room to operate, and parts of two of his fingers were cut off by the blade attached, as he alleged and proved, in consequence of the springs which kept it in place being too weak and old to hold it. He testified that he knew nothing of any defect in the machinery, and that the agent of the company, who was present when the removal took place and directed and superintended it, gave him no information of the existence of any defect in the particulars named. The court charged the jury, at the request of defendant’s counsel, that if the plaintiff was in charge of this machine for the purpose of managing it and working with it, it was his duty to discover any defect and report it to his superior, which if he failed to do, or if he did do so, and continued to work with the machine, he cannot recover.” The jury found for the defendant, and the plaintiff made a motion for a new trial because of this erroneous charge, and because the verdict was decidedly and strongly against and contrary to evidence ; and because, after the jury had charge of the case for some hours, and being unable to agree, they were informed by the bailiff attending them, late in the afternoon of Saturday, that the court was about to adjourn,- and unless they made a verdict soon, they would be kept over until 10 o’clock of the following Monday. When this information was given them, they found a verdict for the defendant in a short time. The court, it seems, had informed counsel, in the absence and out of the hearing of the jury, that the case would have to take this direction, when it had been [262]*262previously agreed that a sealed verdict, when found, might be returned. This remark was not reported to the jury as coming from the judge, who had no intention of forcing them to find a verdict, or to interfere with the agreement of counsel in relation to a sealed verdict. In support of the last ground, an affidavit of Bugg, the bailiff attending the jury, who signed the same “subject to correction,” was relied on, to the effect that, while the jury were up stairs in their room, he told them that if they did not make a verdict soon, he would have to keep them over until 10 o’clock a. m. Monday, as the court would adjourn soon; this was said in reply to questions asked by some of the jury, but he did not intimate to them that this came from the judges and it was not communicated with a view of forcing a verdict, for, at the same time, he handed them an envelope, and told them it was for a sealed verdict. Several of the jurors made affidavits, as did also counsel, Mr. Phinizy, which the plaintiff offered in support of this ground of the motion. The motion was refused, and he excepted, and assigns the judgment overruling the same as error.

1. It seems that the court refused to consider the affidavits of the jurors and of plaintiff’s counsel, for the reason that the former could not be heard to impeach their verdict, and the matters deposed to by the latter were merely the sayings of members of the jury after they had dispersed, and of others. In this there was no error.

2. While the bailiff’s conduct was reprehensible, and subjected him to censure and rendered him liable to punishment, yet conceding that the statements contained in his affidavit are positive and unqualified, it is scarcely doubtful to our mind that they were not necessarily such as to force a verdict, which the jury were unwilling or were reluctant to return; they knew that it was late in the evening of Saturday, that the hour for adjournment of the court was approaching or had arrived, and that no session could be held on Sunday, and that there could be none until the usual hour of meeting on Monday; at the very [263]*263same time, an envelope was handed to them, in which to enclose and seal up their verdict; and conceding to them ordinary intelligence, it is scarcely to be doubted they understood from this that when the verdict was rendered and sealed up, they were at liberty to disperse and go to their homes, unless perchance they failed to agree before 12 o’clock Saturday night and their labors did not extend into Sunday. This case fails short of any of those where new trials have been granted for authorized or unauthorized communications made to the jury having a tendency to force a verdict when they desired further time for deliberation before reaching a conclusion. This more closely resembles the case of Collins vs. The State, decided at the present term (ante, p. 87), than any of the preceding cases to which we have been referred, or that our own research has brought to light, where we held that where, soon after retiring to their room to deliberate upon the verdict, the court directed the sheriff to inquire of the jury if they were likely to agree soon, and to inform them that their services were needed in the court-room, and the sheriff so said to them, it was for the party complaining of such action to show affirmatively that he was thereby injured; and in the absence of such a showing, the verdict would not be disturbed. But if all this were otherwise, no case of improper interference with them is made out by the bailiff’s affidavit, which, as has been shown, was the only evidence offered in support of this ground of the motion; that affidavit, expressing on its face that it was " subject to correction,” made no positive statement of any fact, and amounted to nothing. 1 Bacon’s Ab. tit. Affidavit(c).

3. The charge of the court excepted to may be most conveniently considered with the remaining grounds of the motion. While it may, in a measure, be subject in a slight degree to the criticism made, that it was “ too broadin other words, that it was not sufficiently guarded ; that the terms in which a correct principle is attempted to be announced are somewhat inapt and inappropriate; yet we [264]*264do not think it so defective in this particular as necessarily to have misled the jury, and thus injured the plaintiff; neither can we agree with counsel that it was too strong. The principle which it substantially announces, if applicable to the facts shown by this case, is, that while it is the duty of employers to furnish their servants with reasonably safe implements and tools for use while working, yet if the servant is aware of the dangerous character of a particular tool or instrument, or might, by the exercise of ordinary care, have been apprised of it, and continues nevertheless to use it, he cannot have redress for any damage he sustains by its use; nor does it alter the rule that the servant knowingly used a dangerously defective tool in the presence of and by the immediate orders of the master, or one who stands in his place and exercises his authority. Central Railroad vs. Haslett, 74 Ga. 59.

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Bluebook (online)
78 Ga. 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelling-v-industrial-manufacturing-co-ga-1886.