Powhatan Lime Co. v. Affleck's Administrator

79 S.E. 1054, 115 Va. 643, 1913 Va. LEXIS 78
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 20, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 79 S.E. 1054 (Powhatan Lime Co. v. Affleck's Administrator) 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
Powhatan Lime Co. v. Affleck's Administrator, 79 S.E. 1054, 115 Va. 643, 1913 Va. LEXIS 78 (Va. 1913).

Opinion

Keith, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court. .

In this suit Affleck’s administrator recovered a judgment against the Powhatan Lime Company, which is before us upon a writ of error.

The Powhatan Lime Company is 'a Virginia corporation, engaged in the quarrying of rock and in the manufacture of it into lime and marketing the same. It employs a number of servants, and one of its departments provides for the nailing of barrels. The declaration alleges that in the conduct of its business it uses complicated machinery, and requires the performance of duties on the part of its employees, some of which are in their nature dangerous; that as a part of its enterprise the defendant requires its employees to move cars over its track from place to place, preparatory to loading the same with lime for shipment, these cars being frequently moved down an incline on a spur track, and while they rest upon this track are held in place by tightening the brakes and by a scotch or wedge placed under the lower wheel of the car, and when it is necessary to move the car, the brakes are, of course, loosened and the scotch or wedge taken out.

[645]*645The declaration further avers that William L. Afii?~k, who was a minor, was employed by the limestone company, with the consent of his father, to labor at the work of nailing barrels, and to do other like work not of a more dangerous character; that Affleck was a boy sixteen years of age, of small stature, and wanting in strength, experience and capacity; that defendant assigned this infant to work, the dangers of which he was incapable of comprehending and avoiding, without any instruction as to the manner in which the same was to be performed and the dangers incident thereto guarded against.

On behalf of the defendant, the facts now material to be considered are that at the place of the accident the tracks ran north and south, and on the right-hand side of the track there was a bank or cut about six or seven feet in depth; that a car projecting over the track would leave a space of only six or seven inches between the oar and the bank; that owing to this condition it was dangerous to work upon the east side of the track, and there is evidence tending to prove that the defendant instructed the plaintiff’s intestate not to go upon the east side of the track at all, but to perform his duties upon the west side, which there is evidence tending to show was a reasonably safe place. The plaintiff’s intestate disregarded this instruction, went upon the east side of the track, and, as the plaintiff in error contends, thus became the author of his own injury.

There were a number of exceptions taken during the progress of the trial to the admission of evidence, but Ave find no error in the rulings of the court with respect to them, and none of them presents any question of sufficient interest or importance to require further consideration. A number of instructions were offered, some of Avhieh Avere given and others refused, but in the main we think the rulings of the court with respect to these instructions [646]*646were correct, and the instructions given were quite sufficient to enable the jury intelligently to consider the evidence, except with respect to two instructions which deal with the defense of contributory negligence, one of which was given at the instance of the. plaintiff in error.

The doctrine of contributory negligence implies the existence of negligence. We are of opinion that the evidence tends to prove negligence on the part of the plaintiff in error. There is evidence which tends to show that the boy who was killed ivas only sixteen years of age; a country lad, inexperienced in the use of machinery, mentally and physically undeveloped, and of small stature. There is proof that his father, in view of these facts, was careful to inform the plaintiff in error, and to make it a condition of the boy’s employment that he should not be placed in positions of danger; the father stating at the time that he did not care for him to go about machinery, as he never had had any experience. The result was an understanding with the plaintiff in error that he was to be employed in the barrel department in nailing barrels, or if there was no regular work in that department, to pick up lime or unload coal.

Prom the facts we have stated, we think the jury might have fairly inferred that the defendant company had been guilty of negligence in exposing the boy to risks different from those incident to his contract of employment, in the performance of duties for which he was unfitted by reason of lack of experience and skill.

The contention of the defendant in error is that by reason of the contract of employment and its breach, the plaintiff in error was estopped to make the defense of contributory negligence; but in this view we cannot concur. Although the plaintiff in error may have been guilty of negligence, yet if the contributory negligence of the defendant in error’s intestate contributed to the injury, he [647]*647cannot recover. As we liave said, contributory negligence on the part of the. person injured always implies negligence on the part of the person causing the injury.

In Labatt on Master and Servant, p. 3992, sec. 1387, the doctrine for which defendant in error contends, is thus stated: “It is said that the master’s order to a servant to do work outside the scope of his original employment operates as an implied assurance that the new duties may be performed without incurring any abnormal risks. Under this theory it would seem that the master is virtually converted, for the time being, into a guarantor of the servant’s safety. Upon the assumption that this is the effect of the Indiana decisions, they have been condemned in Alabama.

“The disapproval thus expressed is, in the opinion of the present writer, well founded. There is no valid ground for departing in this instance from the general principle discussed in chapter LXXX,” ante (which deals with knowledge as an element of the master’s liability). “It should be observed, however, that the effect of the sweeping language used by the Indiana courts is considerably qualified by the fact that the defense of an assumption of the risks is conceded to be a bar to the action if the evidence shows that those risks were, as a matter of fact, appreciated.” See Brazil Block Co. v. Hoodlet, 129 Ind. 327, 27 N. E. 741; Mary Lee Coal & R. Co. v. Chambliss, 97 Ala. 171, 11 South. 897.

This brings us to the defense of contributory negligence. There is evidence, as we have already said, which tends to show that the east side of the track ivas a dangerous place in which to put an inexperienced youth to work. The west side of the track, however, the evidence tends to prove was one of reasonable safety, and plaintiff’s intestate was warned not to work upon the east side, but upon the west side only. At the instance of the defendant in 'error the court instructed the jury that “contributory negligence [648]*648on the part of the decedent is snch negligence as contributes directly to and is the proximate cause of the accident or injury complained of, and that if the defendant relies upon the defense of contributory negligence upon the part of the decedent, the burden of proof of such contributory negligence rests upon the said defendant, unless the contributory negligence appears from the plaintiff’s own evidence, in which case the burden shifts.”

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Bluebook (online)
79 S.E. 1054, 115 Va. 643, 1913 Va. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powhatan-lime-co-v-afflecks-administrator-va-1913.