Rice v. Lockhart Mills

55 S.E. 160, 75 S.C. 150, 1906 S.C. LEXIS 23
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 11, 1906
StatusPublished

This text of 55 S.E. 160 (Rice v. Lockhart Mills) 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
Rice v. Lockhart Mills, 55 S.E. 160, 75 S.C. 150, 1906 S.C. LEXIS 23 (S.C. 1906).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Chief Justice Pope.

The plaintiff sought $10,000 damages of defendant because he alleged that while he was in the employment of the defendant his left hand and- arm were caught in the machinery of the defendant and was so badly torn and broken-- that the arm had to be' amputated above the elbow, causing him great suffering, injuiy and damage. That such injury was directly due to and caused by the negligence of the defendant in the following respects:

First. In not furnishing him a safe place in which to work; in that the said machinery was not sufficiently lighted so- that he could see the danger which afterward injured him, and. by reason of which he was unconscious of such danger.

Second. In not instructing him- as to- the danger of the machine, which was not evident to- him and of'which be was unconscious, and in not warning him of the danger of putting his hand at said place, where it w'as caught as aforesaid while attempting to clean said -b-ox.

The answer of the defendant admits its co-rporate capacity and that the plaintiff was in the defendant’s service at its cotton mill, and that he suffered an injury to his arm which was afterward amputated, but it denies each and every allegation contained in the complaint outside of these facts. The defendant asserts that the; injury of the plaintiff was sustained by him through his negligence as the sole cause thereof, in that said plaintiff put his hand into an obviously dangerous place in said machinery when it was in motion, when it -was not necessary for him to do- so-, and when he- had been warned and instructed not to do so- by the proper servants of the defendánt.

The issues came on to be tried before his Honor, Judge Klugh, and a jury at the September Term, 1905, of the Courts of Common Pleas of Union County. Both sides introduced testimony. After the charge of the Judge, the jury rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $3,500. After *152 a judgment upon this verdict, the defendant appealed to1 this Court upon several grounds, which we will consider m their order.

1 “I. Because his Honor erred in refusing to grant the continuance asked for in this case, such refusal amounting to an abuse of his judicial discretion, in that by the showing made on the motion for continuance, it appeared that the defendant was put to great disadvantage by reason of the absence of its leading counsel, the illness of another of its counsel, and the necessary absence, as it then appeared, of the third of its counsel, preparation for and conduct of the trial, therefore, being carried on under circumstances making it very difficult for the case to1 be properly handled.”

The defendant thinks that the Circuit Judge should have granted its motion for a continuance on the grounds set up in this ground of appeal. It seems that Mr. Mordecai, who was the leading counsel for the defendant, made affidavit that he had been ready at the previous term of Court to Ly this case, having his witnesses all present, but, owing to the crowded condition of the docket it could not come on for trial, but at the present, September Term, 1905, Mr. Mordecai had a number of other cases in the county of Beaufort which were being pressed for trial at this same September Term-, and that he was also sole counsel in. another case ordered by the Supreme Court to be heard at the same time fixed by law for the trial at Union and Beaufort.

Also, it appeared by the affidavit of Mr. Scaife, that he had no previous connection with the present case until called upon by Mr. Mordecai to present his affidavit and to ask for the continuance of this cause.

The Circuit Judge allowed Mr. Scaife to present other affidavits for continuance when the case should be called for a hearing; he did so by producing an affidavit showing that Mr. B. F\ Townsend had also been retained by the defendant, and that he bad been summoned by telegraph to attend the bedside of a sick father.

*153 Mr. Simeon Hyde, who was in the employment oí Mr. Mordecai, was also present in Union, but did not expect to take part in the trial. The Circuit Judge, however, oidered the trial to proceed, and at that trial Mr. Scaife, Mr. Townsend and Mr. Hyde participated. We do not think the Circuit Judge made any mistake here.

The date of the Court at Union and at Beaufort were, as before said, fixed by law. It was the duty of defendant counsel to- prepare for these trials. While he could not be in two places at the same time, it was his duty to provide counsel to be in attendance upon the Court, and as usual, he provided for the presence of such counsel, such counsel were present by his careful provision. The Circuit Judge committed no error in holding him to the trial. This ground of appeal is overruled.

2 “II. Because his Honor erred in charging the jury, ‘Where a person employs another person to< do work, it is the duty of the employer to furnish his employee reasonably safe tools or implements or appliances or machinery, whatever the work is to be done with, and to furnish a reasonably safe place in which to do the work, and if the employer fails to furnish reasonably safe implements or tools or machinery or appliances or fails to furnish a reasonably safe place in which to do- the work, and the employee is injured thereby, the employer is liable in damages for the injury.’ The specific errors assigned in this charge being as follows:

“A. It being error so to charge the jury, because this was charging on the facts, in that the Judge stated that certain omissions on the part of the employer constituted negligence and rendered the employer liable in damages.
“B. This charge is erroneous, in that it eliminates the necessary doctrine of ‘proximate cause’ of the injury, which is essential to the charge.
“C. This charge invades the province of the jury by passing upon the facts, in that the hypothetical statements therein contained do not embrace all the circumstances of the *154 case. (The circumstances detailed in plaintiff’s testimony, wherein he testified that he went to the machine, the dangers of which were known to 'him; before the time to1 go to work and before his instructor had come, raised the protectors, and in the dark stuck his hand in the blades, which the plaintiff testified he knew would cut a piece of pine plank in two; if put in there, etc.)
“D. Because this' charge, not including in the hypothetical statement of facts which would have justified the jury in finding that the plaintiff was negligent; the jury under such charge could find for the plaintiff, or if he wilfully suffered tire injury toi occur, and even if the plaintiff’s own act of negligence-were the proximate cause of the injury.”

3 2 A reference to this charge shows that the Circuit Judge considered this matter with great care and that the specific errors are not well founded. A. It was not a charge upon the facts. B.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 S.E. 160, 75 S.C. 150, 1906 S.C. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rice-v-lockhart-mills-sc-1906.