Tuttle v. Hanckel

183 S.E. 484, 179 S.C. 60, 1936 S.C. LEXIS 51
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 7, 1936
Docket14200
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 183 S.E. 484 (Tuttle v. Hanckel) 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
Tuttle v. Hanckel, 183 S.E. 484, 179 S.C. 60, 1936 S.C. LEXIS 51 (S.C. 1936).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Eishburne.

The appellant, an employee of the respondent, brought this action for the recovery of damages alleged to have been sustained by him on July 15, 1933, while working in the dairy of the respondent. The plaintiff in his testimony detailed the facts and circumstances surrounding the accident. His testimony tends to show that (on the day of the accident), he had been working in the dairy only about thirty minutes or a little longer before the accident occurred. At the time of the injury he was carrying a crate of bottles over a wet concrete floor to place them in an automatic bottle-washing machine. He slipped on the floor and fell, dropping *63 the crate of bottles, and one of the broken bottles inflicted a severe cut on his wrist.

It is uncontradicted that it was thé duty of the plaintiff to keep the concrete floor clean, to put the milk bottles into the bottle-washing machine, to oil the washing machine, and to take the bottles off an end of an automatic rinsing machine connected therewith after they had been washed. He testified that he had complained of a leak in the force pump, which was a part of the automatic washing machine, and had complained of hot water splashing out of a vent in the top of the washing machine, which vent was defectively closed.

On the morning of the accident, he went to work at 8 o’clock a. m., and found the room and floor clean, as he had left it the night before. A picture of the room shows that it was well lighted. The appellant was in charge of this room, where he had been working for about three weeks. He testified, further, that the floor of the room would become wet and slippery only while the washing machine was in actual operation; that the floor was not inclined for drainage, nor was it ribbed or corrugated, which made it necessary for the appellant to wear rubber boots with corrugated soles to obviate the risk of slipping and falling. At the time of the accident, he was wearing such boots, purchased by himself. When he fell, the bottles hit the floor first, breaking, which explains the severe cut on his wrist. He cleaned the room twice a day. On the day before the accident, and several days prior thereto, while the machine was in operation, he noticed that the force pump was leaking, and that soapy water and oil were being emitted from it, causing the floor to become increasingly wet and slippery. When he reached his work on the morning of the accident, which was on a Saturday and their busiest day, he was directed by his foreman, Mr. McGee, a representative of the master, to get ten cases of standard quarts and two cases of pints as quickly as he could for the wholesale trade; that in obedience to this order he placed these bottles on the machine as quickly as he could, and was *64 returning with another case when his feet slipped from under him, and the accident followed.

In explaining the accident, he said, “The floor was wet down there in front. I hadn’t noticed it to amount to anything. I was in a hurry. After I fell I wanted to know what caused me to fall so quick and slip, and when I first got up and I looked to see what happened I saw the floor was mighty wet and slippery, and it had come from the packing and stuff. It was also in front of the machine.” He further stated that the pump was leaking much worse than it was the day before, and that soapy liquid and oil were coming out in a steady stream, which caused the floor to be unusually slippery, and added to the hazard; that it leaked ordinarily, but not like this; and that he had not noticed this extraordinary leak in his hurry until after the accident had occurred.

At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s testimony, a motion was made for a nonsuit upon five grounds: (1) That the only reasonable inference to be drawn from the testimony is that the plaintiff was injured as the result of his own sole neglect; (2) that the danger was obvious, and not unusual, and that the plaintiff knew or should have known of its existence; (3) that the defendant was not guilty of any neglect; (4) that the plaintiff was guilty of gross contributory negligence; and (5) assumption of risk.

The trial Judge granted the motion for a nonsuit in the following order: “I realize that if there is a scintilla of evidence to go to the jury, that it is a waste of time to grant a nonsuit. In this case, the plaintiff worked at the particular work he was doing by himself. It was his business to look after the floors and clean them up. He testified that he had not asked for any rubber boots, and they had not been refused. He had bought rubber boots himself, and paid for them out of his own money, showing that he knew the floor was wet, and that there was need of rubber boots, and it seems to me that there is absolutely no evidence of any *65 neglect on the part of the defendant which caused the injury to the plaintiff. It is a serious injury, all of us admit, but at the same time it seems to me one for which the plaintiff was to blame, if anybody was to blame, because there is no evidence that anybody was hurrying him, or any superior officer or employee had given him any instructions to proceed. He testified that he knew this soapy water was on the floor and had been there to such an extent that he had complained to someone else. But there is no evidence that they promised to fix it, and that he relied upon the promise and continued to work, but he continued to work knowing that the condition existed. Not only that, he had worked for several hours before the accident occurred — one hour or some time before the accident happened. And being charged with the duty of cleaning up this room, it seems to me it was clearly his duty to notice the condition of the floor, and it was not through neglect of anyone else. It was nobody else’s duty to look after the floor of this room. It seems to me really to be just an unfortunate accident, and, therefore, I will direct a nonsuit.”

The following questions fairly arise from the exceptions, and will be discussed in the order named:

1. Was there any testimony tending to prove negligence of the master, as a proximate cause?

2. Assumption of risk.

3. AYas the plaintiff guilty of contributory negligence?

It is obvious from a consideration of the testimony that it was anticipated and realized by both employer and employee that the cement floor during the operation of bottle washing would become wet while the washing machine was in actual operation. This is made evident from the fact that the employee wore boots with roughened soles, no doubt for the double purpose of keeping his feet dry and to prevent slipping;. The logical inference is that both parties recognized that the wearing of the boots constituted a reasonable pre *66 caution against the ordinary risk attendant upon the plaintiff’s daily work.

While it is conceded that it was the plaintiff’s duty to keep the floor in a reasonably safe condition for the performance of his work, and that it was his duty to place about two teasponsful of oil in the oil cup of the machine from time to time, there is no evidence in the record that it was his duty to keep the machine in repair. This was the master’s duty.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
183 S.E. 484, 179 S.C. 60, 1936 S.C. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tuttle-v-hanckel-sc-1936.