Court Opinion

ID: 5496396
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-10 02:52:53.716806+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:33:49.461855
License: Public Domain

Pratt, J.
The circuit judge correctly charged the jury that when a master engages an inexperienced servant, especially if of tender years and presumed ignorance, and places him in a place of latent or obscure danger, it is the duty of the master to instruct the servant how to do the work and at the same time be on his guard against the danger. Tested by that rule, the mo-*245lions for nonsuit and for dismissal of the complaint were properly denied. The master did not claim that he had personally given the instructions the rule required, and the jury might well find that such instructions as were testified to did not meet the exigencies of the danger. The jury may well have thought that telling a lad to be careful was not adequate instruction.
Great stress is laid by appellant upon the fact that the lad was injured while acting under the orders of Ward, a fellow-servant, for whose negligence the employer cannot be held responsible. But the recovery did not proceed upon the ground of Ward’s negligence. The jury were carefully instructed that for such negligence no recovery could be had. They were also instructed that if the instructions which the law required from an employer in such circumstances would have sufficed to put the lad on his guard against the negligent orders of Ward, and would have thereby prevented the accident, a recovery might be had for the negligence of the employer. In this there was no error. Judgment affirmed, with costs. All concur.