P. Lorillard Co. v. Clay

104 S.E. 384, 127 Va. 734, 1920 Va. LEXIS 82
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 16, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by65 cases

This text of 104 S.E. 384 (P. Lorillard Co. v. Clay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
P. Lorillard Co. v. Clay, 104 S.E. 384, 127 Va. 734, 1920 Va. LEXIS 82 (Va. 1920).

Opinion

Burks, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

[740]*740Bryan Clay recovered a judgment against P. Lorillard Co. Inc., for $15,000.00, for the loss of an eye, alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the company while he was in its employment as a servant. This judgment the company seeks to have reversed.

[1] Formerly a plaintiff in error stood in this court in the position of a demurrant to the evidence, but this has' been changed. Now, in stating a case in this court which has been tried by a jury, it must be stated as the jury may have viewed it, remembering always that the jury are the sole judges of the weight to be given to the testimony of the witnesses, and also bearing in mind the weight attached to the verdict of a jury which has received the approval of the trial judge. Code, sec. 6365; Roach v. Southern R. Co., 114 Va. 440, 76 S. E. 953, and cases cited.

Thus viewing the testimony, the case at bar is stated as follows: Bryan Clay was reared in the mountains of North Carolina, knew nothing whatever about machinery, and had never been employed elsewhere than on the farm on which he was reared. The P. Lorillard Co., Inc., was engaged in the manufacture of cigars in the city of Richmond, and occupied a large factory five stories high, well filled with machinery suitable for its business; the third story being used for a machine shop and the fifth, in which the injury was sustained, being used for stripping or stemming the tobacco. On this floor there were 250 machines for stripping tobacco. Clay, who was twenty years of age, entered the employment of the company as an apprentice on December 29, 1916. For about two months and a half he was employed simply to oil machinery, after that he was given other employment, but several months before the injury complained of he was put in charge of about fifty stripping machines on the fifth floor. His business here was chiefly to look after the machines under his control and keep them running, though he was directed to as[741]*741sist any other workman on that floor who might call on him for assistance. On October 16, 1917, Edwards, a fellow workman was attempting to drill a hole in an iron or steel door frame of one of the machines and called upon Clay to sight the drill for him to see if it was perpendicular. The drill was being operated by Edwards about three feet above the floor, when Clay came up near the drill and leaned over to get his eyes on a level with the drill and attempted to hold a bushing in place with a screw' driver while he sighted the drill and the hole was being drilled. The drill slipped and struck something which caused it to break, and a piece of the drill flew off and struck Clay in one eye, causing an injury which necessitated the removal of the eyeball. The drill used was a portable electric drill, weighing 27% pounds and the bit was a quarter of an inch bit. The drill was made to carry any bit from ‘ zero up to a half inch, and there was some evidence that it ' was not safe to use so small a bit as a quarter of an inch in a drill of that weight, though the preponderance of the evidence was to the contrary. Other drills of lighter weight were available to Edwards but he was permitted to exercise his own judgment as to what drill to use. It was a common occurrence for bits to break, but there is no evidence that Edwards knéw that fact, or that any had ever previously broken on the fifth floor where he worked, or that he had ever seen one break. He had never sighted a drill but once before and that was for his foreman on that floor, though he had seen other people sight drills. He testifies that he had never been in any other machine shop than Lorillard & Co., and had never had any other employer and that no instructions or warning was ever given him about the use of machine tools. So far as deemed necessary, other evidence in the case will be stated in the course of the opinion.

[2, 3] The injury complained of was inflicted October [742]*74218, 1917. The declaration containing two counts was filed in August, 1918, and the plaintiff was allowed to amend his declaration by adding a third count on March 14, 1919. The amendment consisted in charging an additional ground of negligence on the part of the defendant, to-wit, that the drill was out of repair and was too heavy to use with a one-fourth inch bit, which resulted in the injury complained of. Objection was made in several forms that the amendment stated a new cause of action which was barred by the statute of limitations. It is very clear that the amendment does not state a new cause of action. In the language of Whittle, J., in Wise Terminal Co. v. McCormick, 107 Va. 376, 378, 58 S. E. 584, 585, “the amended declaration merely charges the negligence complained of in a varying form to meet different phases of the evidence.” If there had been a judgment on the original declaration it could have .been pleaded in bar of the ground of action set up in the amendment, and this is a sufficient test of the character of the amendment. In New River Min. Co. v. Painter, 100 Va. 507, 42 S. E. 300, which has been consistently followed in this court, it is said: “If the plaintiff in the amended declaration is attempting to assert rights and to enforce claims . arising out of the same transaction, act, agreement or obligation, however great may be the difference in the form of liability as contained in the amended from that stated in the original declaration, it will not be regarded as for a new cause of action.” (See also, Seal v. Portland Cement Co., 108 Va. 806, 62 S. E. 795; Bowman v. First National Bank, 115 Va. 463, 80 S. E. 95; Standard Paint Co. v. Vietor, 120 Va. 595, 91 S. E. 752; Whalen v. Gordon, 95 Fed. 305, 37 C. C. A. 70, and cases cited; Railroad Co. v. Cox, 145 U. S. 593, 12 Sup. Ct. 905, 36 L. Ed. 829, and numerous citations in Burks’ Pl. & Pr. p. 402, note 14.

[4, 5] The refusal of the trial court to permit the plea of the statute of limitations to the third count of the dec[743]*743laration to be filed because not offered in time is also assigned as error. Our view of the discretion vested in, the trial court in such case is sufficiently expressed in Thacker v. Hubard, 122 Va. 379, 94 S. E. 929, but no harm could have come to the defendant by the rejection of its plea because, as just pointed out, the amendment of the declaration did not make a new case, and the cause of action was not barred at the time the original action was instituted.

[6-10] It is assigned as error that the trial court refused to order a view of the scene of the accident. Views are authorized by sec. 6013 of the Code (sec. 3167 Code of 1887) “when it shall appear to the court that such view is necessary to a just decision.” The motion for a view is addressed to the sound discretion of the trial court and its ruling refusing a view will not be reversed unless it appears, from the record that a view was necessary to a just decision. In the case at bar, the record does not disclose any such necessity.

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Bluebook (online)
104 S.E. 384, 127 Va. 734, 1920 Va. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/p-lorillard-co-v-clay-va-1920.