{
  "id": 8626048,
  "name": "FRANK SMITH v. RALEIGH GRANITE COMPANY and R. G. LASSITER AND COMPANY",
  "name_abbreviation": "Smith v. Raleigh Granite Co.",
  "decision_date": "1932-03-02",
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  "first_page": "305",
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    "name": "Supreme Court of North Carolina"
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  "provenance": {
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    "judges": [],
    "parties": [
      "FRANK SMITH v. RALEIGH GRANITE COMPANY and R. G. LASSITER AND COMPANY."
    ],
    "opinions": [
      {
        "text": "ClaeKSON, J.\nThe defendant, Ealeigh Granite Company, in the court below, at the close of plaintiff\u2019s evidence, and at the conclusion of all the evidence, made motions for judgment as in case of nonsuit. C. S., 567. These motions were overruled and in this we can see no error.\nWe think the evidence, taken in a light most favorable to plaintiff, sufficient in this case to have been submitted to the jury. We only consider the evidence of plaintiff. It was a question for the jury and not for us; nor do we find any error in the trial of the action in the court below.\nAll the evidence was to the effect that the Ealeigh Granite Company had control of the plaintiff \u201cto indicate the work which the plaintiff was to do,\u201d and did so indicate the work at the place where the plaintiff was injured. At the time plaintiff was not actually under the control of the State Prison authorities. Jenkins v. Griffith, 189 N. C., 633; Reeves v. Construction Co., 194 N. C., 817. Under the facts and circumstances of this case the Ealeigh Granite Company owed plaintiff a duty that is well settled in this jurisdiction.\nIn Beck v. Tanning Co., 179 N. C., at p. 125, we find: \u201cIt is unquestionably the duty of the master to use proper care in providing a reasonably safe place where the servant may do his work, and reasonably safe machinery, implements, and so forth, with which to do the work assigned to him (West v. Tanning Co., 154 N. C., 44), and this duty is a primary, and an absolute one, which he cannot delegate to another Avithout, at the same time, incurring the risk of himself becoming liable for the neglect of his agent, so entrusted with the performance of this duty which belongs to the master, for in such a case, the negligence of the agent, or fellow-servant, if he is appointed to act for the master, is the latter\u2019s neglect also-,\u201d citing numerous authorities. Beck v. Chair Co., 188 N. C., 743; Parker v. Mfg. Co., 189 N. C., 275; Thomas v. Lawrence, 189 N. C., 521. Liability frequently attaches when injury is caused by negligence of alter ego, to aggrieved party. Howard v. Oil Co., 174 N. C., at p. 653.\nSpeaking to the subject, we find in 21 E. C. L. \u201cPrisons and Prisoners,\u201d part sec. 26, p. 1089-90, the following: \u201cWhile, in a sense, the relation of master and servant may be said to exist between a prisoner and the lessee of his labor, and some authorities so hold, the relation cannot be said to exist in the strict sense, because the service is not voluntary, or for hire or reward, and also because the control exercised by the contractor over the convict is usually limited. Consequently it has been held that where the State, by officers of its own selection, retains the immediate and direct supervision and control of leased convicts, the hirer thereof is not liable to the prisoner for injuries due to negligent acts which he has no power to prevent. He is, however, held to a master\u2019s liability to the convict in respect to those incidents of the employment over which he has the same measure of control that a master ordinarily has. Therefore, it is held that he is not relieved of the ordinary, care towards convicts which he is required to exercise towards his employees, and he will be 1'iable to them for failure to provide a safe place in which to work and for knowingly bringing vicious persons into contact with them. The contractor is also bound to see that the appliances with which the prisoner is working are reasonably safe. . . . But where the prisoner of his own volition chooses an unusually dangerous method of executing the contractor\u2019s commands, .he may be barred by contributory negligence.-\u201d See Holloway v. Moser, 193 N. C., 185.\nUnder the facts and circumstances of- this case, we do- not think that the engineer of the hoisting engine was a fellow-servant of plaintiff, therefore the prayer for instruction by the Raleigh Granite Company to that effect cannot be sustained. Thompson v. Oil Co., 177 N. C., at p. 282; Robinson v. Ivey, 193 N. C., at p. 812; Pyatt v. R. R., 199 N. C., at p. 404.\nThe exceptions and assignments of error as to the testimony of plaintiff\u2019s uncle cannot be sustained. A week after plaintiff\u2019s injury, he saw the place and the wire cable and described its condition at that time. This was a circumstance \u2014 some evidence. Then again, this may not be prejudicial, the evidence was to the effect that the engineer of the hoisting engine, an alter ego, who according to plaintiff\u2019s evidence he \u201chollered to the man to go forward and instead of going forward ho sent it back and that caught my hand and coat,\u201d etc.\nIn Blevins v. Cotton Mills, 150 N. C., at p. 498, we find the following : \u201cIt may be well to note that the doctrine we are now discussing refers to the objective conditions, where, from the facts and circumstances, it is reasonably probable that no change has occurred, and must not be confused with the position which obtains with us, that voluntary changes made by an employer after an injury to an employee, and imputed to the employer\u2019s negligence, are not, as a rule, relevant on the trial of an issue between them.\u201d Almond, v. Oceola Mills, Inc., ante, at p. 100; 10 R. C. L. \u201cEvidence,\u201d sec. 112, p. 943. The evidence was undoubtedly competent to corroborate the plaintiff and no request was made that it be restricted. See latter part of Rule 21 of Practice in the Supreme Court,1 200 N. C., at p. 821 and cases cited.\nWe think the special instructions asked for by defendant properly refused by the court below. It will be noted that the court below submitted an issue of contributory negligence and charged the law on this aspect applicable to the facts. In the charge of the court below we find no error, taking the charge as a whole. The court below charged correctly what was negligence, and further \u201cthat such negligent breach of duty was the proximate cause of the injury, the cause .that produced the result in continuous sequence, and without which it would not have occurred, and one from which any man of ordinary prudence could have foreseen that such a result was probable under all the facts as they existed.\u201d\nThe defendants\u2019 contentions that in other parts of the charge proximate cause is not repeated, we cannot say, if error, it was prejudicial. In the judgment of the court below, we find\nNo error.",
        "type": "majority",
        "author": "ClaeKSON, J."
      }
    ],
    "attorneys": [
      "Peter R. Hines and Julius Brown for plaintiff.",
      "Parham & Lassiter and Albion Bunn for defendant Raleigh Granite Company."
    ],
    "corrections": "",
    "head_matter": "FRANK SMITH v. RALEIGH GRANITE COMPANY and R. G. LASSITER AND COMPANY.\n(Filed 2 March, 1932.)\n1. Trial D a \u2014 On motion, of nonsuit only evidence favorable to the plaintiff will he considered.\nUpon a motion as of nonsuit the evidence will be considered in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, and only evidence tending to support his cause of action will be considered. C. S., 567.\n2. Master and Servant C b \u2014 Evidence of failure of one hiring State convicts to provide reasonably safe place to work held sufficient.\nWhere the plaintiff\u2019s evidence tends to show that the defendant hired State convicts to work in Ms rock quarry and had control of the convicts to the extent of indicating the work to be done by them, that the plaintiff, one of the convicts so hired out, was told by the defendant to shovel rock from a pile so that it could be taken out by a drag pan which was. pulled backward and forward by a cable operated by a steam 'engine, that the cable was frayed and that the plaintiff had repeatedly told the engineer, the defendant\u2019s alter ego, of its dangerous condition, that at the time of the injury the plaintiff was not actually under the control of the prison authorities, and that the plaintiff, in the performance of his duties, told the engineer to pull the drag pan fox-ward, but the engineer pulled it back and that the plaintiff\u2019s clothes caught in the frayed cable, causing the injury in suit, is Held, sufficient to be submitted to the jury on the issue of the defendant\u2019s failure to exercise due care to provide the plaintiff a reasonably safe place to work.\n3. Master and Servant C a \u2014 Employer is ordinarily liable for negligence of alter ego.\nThe duty of an employer to exercise due care to provide his employee a reasonably safe place to work and reasonably safe and suitable tools and appliances is absolute and may not be delegated to another so as to relieve the employer of liability, and the employer is ordinarily liable for the negligence of his alter ego which causes injury t\u00f3 an employee.\n4. Same \u2014 Although one hiring State convicts is not strictly an employer he owes certain duties to them arising from the relation.\nAlthough the relationship of master and servant does not exist in the strict sense of the term between State convicts and one hiring their labor from the State, the one hiring such labor owes certain duties to the convicts incident to the relationship, and in this case the evidence of the failure of the one hiring such convicts to exercise due care to provide a reasonably safe place to work and the negligence of his alter ego causing injury to a prisoner was properly submitted to the jury.\n5. Master and Servant G e \u2014 In this case held: engineer was alter ego of employer and not fellow servant of employee.\nUnder the facts and circumstances of this case an engineer in charge of a hoisting engine was an alter ego of the defendant and the refusal of instructions, requested .by the defendant relating to the fellow-servant doctrine was not error.\n6. Evidence D h: Trial B f \u2014 Exception to corroborative testimony will not be sustained when no request that it be restricted is made.\nWhere an employee has testified to the dangerous condition of a wire cable used in the performance of the work, an exception to the admission of the testimony of another witness as to the condition of the cable will not be sustained where the other witness properly identifies the cable in question and testifies that he saw it a week after the injury in suit, the evidence being competent as corroborative evidence at least, and there being no request that the testimony be restricted for that purpose.\n7. Trial E c \u2014 Charge in this case held sufficient when construed as a whole.\nWhere, in an action by an employee for a negligent personal injury, the trial.court has correctly charged the law applicable to the facts on the issues of negligence, contributory negligence, and has fully charged the law relating to the question of proximate cause, the defendant\u2019s exception to the failure of the court to repeat in other parts of the charge the law of proximate cause will not be held for error, the charge being correct when taken as a whole.\nAppeal by the defendant Raleigh Granite Company from Moore, Special Judge, at September Term, 1931, of Pitt.\nNo error.\nThis is an action for actionable negligence brought by plaintiff against the defendants.\nThe contention of plaintiff was to the effect that he was a Negro and sent to the penitentiary for an attempt to kill. That the officials of the State prison of the State of North Carolina hired certain convicts to work in the rock quarries of defendant, Raleigb Granite Company, including himself. The defendant Raleigh Granite Company admits that it had no control over plaintiff \u201cother than to indicate the work which the plaintiff was to do.\u201d That the Raleigh Granite Company failed in its duty to plaintiff in the exercise of reasonable or due care to provide for plaintiff a safe place to work and appliances safe and suitable for the work which he was instructed to do, and to keep same in safe condition in the exercise of proper care and supervision. That the engineer of the hoisting engine, an alter ego, was negligent in the operation. That- the failure of these duties were the proximate cause of the injury to plaintiff.\nThe evidence on the part of plaintiff was to the effect that he was sent to the rock quarry belonging to defendant Raleigh Granite Company. He was put to work by the \u201cboss\u201d of defendant Granite Company, on top of a rock pile. He was given a shovel to push rock down from a rock pile so that a scoop or drag pan could remove it. The drag pan was pulled by a standard three-quarter wire rope, or cable, 6-ply, 19-strand. One pulled it backward and one pulled it forward, they ran through the pulley. The drag pan was pulled forward and backward by the man on the engine, the engineer. The drag pan weighed about 700 or 800 pounds.\n'The plaintiff worked at this place about two weeks before his injury.The plaintiff testified, in part, that the wire rope or cable \u201cwas ragged and old and had a whole lot of frazzles on the rope and looked like it would break any time. Those frazzles were out of that wire. ... I told the man pulling that wire that it had frazzles sticking up on it and was liable to break any time. ... I told him about three times and he never did fix it. The same night I was hurt I told him. I told him before that. I told him the night before and he never did fix it and the next night I got caught in it. He or the company did not. make any repair of the rope.\u201d\nThe night plaintiff was injured was dark and there was a drizzling rain, the lights went out and when they came on \u201cI couldn\u2019t see like .1 ought to.\u201d The injury happened between ten and eleven o\u2019clock at night.\nPlaintiff further testified: \u201cI was pushing them rocks down with this shovel and while I was pushing them down I hollered to the man to go forward and instead of going forward he sent it back and that caught my hand and coat, and wound it around up in there and pulled it through the pulley. By reason of that I was injured. There wasn\u2019t anything ailed me before that. It cut off my fingers. I told the man in charge of the engine to go ahead and instead of hauling the shovel forward he pulled it back. That flapped the wires against me. . . . Nobody bas ever given me any instructions but to push those rocks down. I did what he told me. I got hurt while doing what he told me. The lights went out just as I was pushing them on down.\u201d\nLewis Smith, uncle of plaintiff, testified, in part: \u201cI asked him was ho the boss man of that business and he told me yes, and I told him my sister\u2019s son got hurt up there and I would like to see him and he told me he was gone to the hospital. I told him how did he get hurt. He told me he got hurt with that there machine uj) there on the rock pile. I went on around down there to look at it. It has been over three years ago. It was a week after he got hurt when I went up there. . . . That cable had a wheel where that cable went through the pole. The right-hand side of the cable had frazzles on it next to this pan. That right-hand side looked like it had frazzles on it. It looked like it was an old rope. . . . There was frazzles here about that long (indicating), looked like little bristles standing out. Looked like they would tear. I don\u2019t know about wrapping around. Those cable'wires will catch you and bring you in if you have got on clothes.\u201d\nThe defendant, Baleigh Granite Company, denied any negligence and set up the plea of contributory negligence. There was evidence introduced by defendant to sustain its contentions.\nThe defendant, Bobert G. Lassiter and Company, in further answer \u201cDenies that the plaintiff was employed by or working for this defendant under any contract with the State Prison authorities, or otherwise, and denies that it owns or did own at the time of the alleged injury of which the plaintiff complains, any interest in the Bolesville Quarry mentioned and described in the complaint, and denies that the plaintiff was or has been engaged in any work of any kind under any arrangement with anybody for this defendant.\u201d\nAt the close of plaintiff\u2019s evidence, Bobert G. Lassiter and Company, made a motion for judgment as in ease of nonsuit, which the court below granted.\nThe issues submitted to the jury and their answers thereto were as follows:\n\u201c1. Was the plaintiff injured by the negligence of the defendant (Bal-eigh Granite Company) as alleged in the complaint? Answer: Yes.\n2. Did the plaintiff, by his own negligence, contribute to his injury, as alleged in the answer? Answer: No.\n3. What damages, if any, is the plaintiff entitled to recover? Answer: $1,125.\u201d\nThe court below rendered judgment on the verdict. The Baleigh Granite Company made numerous exceptions and assignments of error and appealed to the Supreme Court. The material ones will be considered in the opinion.\nPeter R. Hines and Julius Brown for plaintiff.\nParham & Lassiter and Albion Bunn for defendant Raleigh Granite Company."
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