Opinion
6858
April 11, 1908.
Before PRINCE, J., Horry, Summer Term, 1907. Affirmed.
Action by Thomas Daggett Ogilvie against Conway Lumber Company. From judgment for plaintiff, defendant appeals.
Mr. Robt. B. Scarborough, for appellant, cites: Assumption of risks was sufficiently pleaded: 70 S.C. 470; 61 S.C. 478; 66 S.C. 204; 75 S.C. 68. When action is for exemplary damages alone actual damages cannot be recovered: 14 S.E., 943, 947; 37 S.C. 194.
Messrs. G.T. Graham and H.H. Woodward, contra, cite: Assumption of risks should be pleaded: 73 S.C. 503. It is duty of master to warn inexperienced servant of hidden danger: 20 Ency., 97, 100, 122.
April 11, 1908. The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The plaintiff, a minor, sustained personal injuries while operating a trim or butt saw in the employ of the defendant company in its lumber mill at Conway, Horry County, on November 12, 1904, and brought this action for damages, alleging that the said injury was the result of defendant's negligent and wilful conduct in using an old, worn and defective rope to hold the saw in position and prevent it from coming in contact with the operator; in failing to provide proper guards thereto; in so piling up lumber on the floor about the saw as to compel the plaintiff to stand in front of the saw while operating the same, and in requiring plaintiff, an inexperienced boy of seventeen years, to operate said saw.
The suit resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff for $1,500, from which defendant appeals on exceptions raising two questions:
1. Whether there was error in refusing defendant's request to charge on the matter of assumption of risk. These requests were declined on the ground that assumption of risk had not been pleaded, under the authority of Montgomery v. R.R. Co., 73 S.C. 503, 53 S.E., 987, which holds that assumption of risk by an employee is an affirmative defense and must be pleaded to be available. In that case the answer was a general denial. The appellant, however, contends that the answer in this case did set up the plea of assumption of risk by alleging facts which constitute such defense within the rule stated in Charping v. Toxaway Mills, 70 S.C. 470, 50 S.E., 186. On examining the pleadings in the case at bar we find that the fourth allegation in the complaint as to plaintiff's employment by defendant, and the fifth allegation as to injury in the course of such employment were expressly denied. Up to this point the rule in Montgomery's case strictly applied. The answer further alleges:
"That plaintiff had been fully apprised by the defendant of the dangers attendant upon the operation of the said saw, and cautioned and commanded to be careful and prudent in the use of same. That the plaintiff undertook to operate the said saw of his own volition; was required to see that the same was in good order, and if any defect therein existed it was his duty to report the same to this defendant. That if such defect existed it could have been ascertained by plaintiff, but for his disobedience to orders, carelessness and negligence, and he is guilty of contributory negligence therein."
This allegation was manifestly intended to set up the plea of contributory negligence, and the pleader can not complain if the Circuit Court so construed it. In so far as any fact stated above may relate both to the matter of contributory negligence and assumption of risk the defendant got the benefit thereof under the full and clear instructions given by the Court as to contributory negligence.
2. The exception to the refusal of the motion for new trial can not be sustained. Subdivision "f" of this exception alleges that the verdict for actual damages was excessive. We have no power to correct the verdict on this ground, it not appearing that the verdict is so excessive as to warrant an inference that it was the result of arbitrariness, capriciousness or improper motives on the part of the jury. There was testimony that the plaintiff received a serious and painful wound in the groin, confining him to his bed for a month and preventing him from work for a year and a half. Subdivisions "c," "d" and "e" of this exception relate to the weight of and sufficiency of the testimony, and do not present any question of law for review. Subdivisions "a" and "b" of this exception raise the question that the only inference of which the testimony is susceptible is that plaintiff's injury was the result of his own negligence in standing in front of the cutoff saw, a dangerous place, instead of standing on one side thereof, a safe place. There was some evidence tending to show that defendant had piled the lumber so close on the sides of the place where the saw operated as to make it necessary for plaintiff to operate the saw from the front; that this was a safe place if the rope attachment was sound.
The cut-off saw moved with the machinery, and when not in use was held near the wall out of the way of the operator by means of a rope, one end of which was attached to the saw frame, the rope running through an opening in the wall and having a weight attached to the other end, suspended outside the house, sufficient to draw the saw to the wall when released by the operator. When the operator wished to use the saw he would pull the saw frame down over the bench and, with his hands, hold the saw in place during the operation of sawing. There was testimony that this rope was old, worn and defective, a fact not known to the plaintiff, and that on this occasion it suddenly broke, thereby letting the saw drop against the plaintiff and cut him.
There was, we think, sufficient testimony to send the case to the jury, both on the question of defendant's negligence and plaintiff's contributory negligence, and, therefore, it was not error of law to refuse a new trial.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.