The plaintiff was a “doffer boy” about 15 years of age, working for defendant, when the injury for which this action is .instituted occurred. He testified, in part, as follows: “A doffer gets bobbins they put on a spindle and when they get full you have to take them off and replace them with empty bobbins and carry the full ones to the winding room so they can be wound. It was my job to take them off as doffer and put them in a box. A wooden box had a place at each end to put the bobbins in, and in the middle you put the empty box to doff in. You slide the box off and put another on and go back and doff again. . . . When the box is filled, it is carried to the winding-room. I had to run with it to keep it from running over. The box was on rollers and was moved by pushing it. Pushing it, I took it from the spinning room to the thread room, down an alley with machines on each side of it. There was about six inches clearance on each side of the box, I guess. In taking the box from the spinning frame into the thread room, I was required to go at a fast rate of speed. The boss man, Howard Perguson, and Raymond Coleman, who was section foreman, required this. He said ‘Keep a move on you and not let them run over.’ Howard Perguson, boss man of the spinning room, said for us to keep on moving and not let them run over. It was necessary for us to run to get it down there and back before one run over, you know, the thread run over top bobbin on another one. We were doffing and we started down the alley with the doff box and having to run, and there was a rocker there, a piece of iron what they call a rocker that carries the travois up and down on the spinning frame so it can wind. The doff box hit that rocker and threw me over in it and fractured my leg. . . . The rocker is supposed to be turned in straight, but this was out of line out in the aisle. When it is turned in straight it is not out of the way. On this occasion, it was projecting out about an inch oí-an inch and a half. That is what I struck. It threw me in the doff box. ... I had to run. There were 16 machines and they filled up the spindles so fast that I had to run to get down there and back. . . . You could see it after I hit it. I couldn’t see it before, you *585couldn’t see tbat and everything else going down the alley. It would be impossible to see it while running because there was so many along there. The bottom was close to the floor. The rocker was sticking out. It was twisted out of line and the bottom of it was close to the floor and the truck hit it. I couldn’t see it. You would be going with the box. You must be looking straight in front of you. . . . The basket is a wooden structure. . . . The whole thing is about a foot and a half or two feet high all along the length of it. It is about four feet long. The sides and front are solid plank. I pushed it from behind. You get one hand on the bobbin box and push the other on that way so you can guide it. You have to bend over and run along behind. It has little ordinary wooden wheels. The rocker that I hit was something like 8 inches off the floor. The box slid sideways. If it slides sideways into the frame and the rocker is not out, it will not hurt anything. Where the side is smooth and nothing for it to come in contact with, it doesn’t hurt, but the rocker sticking out is what stops you.”
The question presented: “Was there sufficient evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant to be submitted to the jury, and if so, did plaintiff’s own evidence establish his contributory negligence?” We think there was sufficient evidence to be submitted to the jury on the question of negligence and the question of contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff was properly submitted to the jury. In Boswell v. Hosiery Mills, 191 N. C., 549 (555), speaking to the subject: “The master is not an insurer. The duty of the master is set forth in Riggs v. Mfg. Co., 190 N. C., p. 258, as follows: ‘That the employer of labor, in the exercise of reasonable care, must provide for his employees a safe place to do their work and supply them with machinery, implements and appliances safe and suitable for the work in which they are engaged, and to keep such implements, etc., in safe condition as far as this can be done by the exercise of proper care and supervision.’ The employer failing in this duty renders himself liable to an employee who may sustain injuries as the proximate result of his negligence.”
The employer must know of the defect, or be negligent in not discovering it and making the needed repairs. West v. Tanning Co., 154 N. C., 44; Reid v. Rees, 155 N. C., 230; Cozzins v. Chair Co., 165 N. C., 364; Wright v. Thompson, 171 N. C., 91; Nixon v. Oil Mill, 174 N. C., 730.
In 18 R. C. L., “Master and Servant,” section 95, pp. 593, 594, 595, is the following: “Although the doctrine has met with some opposition, the courts have generally held that an employer owes to his employees, a duty to make safe the place where they are required to perform their services, failing in which, he renders himself liable to an employee who may sustain injuries as the proximate result of his neglect. In this respect as in others, the employer is not liable as an insurer, but is bound only to the exercise of ordinary or reasonable care, the degree *586depending np011 tbe dangers attending tbe employment, and tbe standard being tbe care exercised by prudent employers under similar circumstances. This duty of tbe employer is affirmative and continuing, and it cannot be delegated to another so as to relieve tbe employer of liability in case of nonperformance. Tbe dangers to which tbe employer’s duty extends are all such as are latent and concealed, and hence beyond tbe knowledge of tbe employee. To discover such dangers, tbe employer must make proper tests and inspections, and after ascertaining their existence, be must as a rule, give tbe employee warning thereof. Tbe employee may assume that tbe employer has discharged this duty, and no obligation rests upon him to make inspections with a view to discovering latent perils. Whether in any particular case, tbe employer has discharged bis duty in this respect is ordinarily a question for tbe jury’s determination.”
3 LaBatt’s Master and Servant (2d ed.), Employers Liability, part section 1032 (132) : at p. 2731: “How long a defect must have existed before a master can be charged with knowledge of it is primarily a question of fact for tbe jury, to be determined with reference to tbe character of the instrumentality, tbe difficulty of discovering tbe conditions constituting tbe defect, and tbe master’s opportunities for observation, due account being taken of tbe nature and extent of tbe obligations which tbe law imposes on him with respect to regular periodical inspections in tbe case of tbe particular instrumentality.”
In tbe case of Hood v. Mitchell, 204 N. C., 130 (135), this Court said: “It is rarely tbe case that tbe court can bold as a matter of law upon tbe allegations of tbe complaint, or upon evidence offered by tbe plaintiff, that plaintiff who has been injured by tbe negligence of tbe defendant, cannot recover damages resulting from such injuries, because by bis own negligence, be contributed to bis injuries.”
Tbe evidence succinctly was to tbe effect that plaintiff “doffer boy” was about 15 years old. He bad to take tbe bobbins that were “full” and put them in a wooden box and carry them to tbe “winding room.” Tbe box was on rollers and was moved by pushing down an alley or aisle, with machines on each side. Plaintiff testified: “In taking tbe box from tbe spinning frame into tbe thread room, I was required to go at a fast rate of speed. Tbe boss man, Howard Perguson, and Raymond Coleman, who was section foreman, required this. He said, 'Keep a move on you and not let. them run over.’ ”
When performing this duty, tbe doff box struck a rocker projecting in tbe alley or aisle about an inch or an inch and a half and be was injured. Tbe evidence was to tbe effect that “there was about 6 inches clearance on each side of tbe box.” We think under tbe facts and circumstances of this case, tbe question of negligence and contributory negligence was for tbe jury to determine. Tbe charge of the judge *587in tbe municipal court is not in tbe record. Tbe presumption of tbe law is tbat be charged fully, tbe law applicable to tbe facts on every phase of tbe case. Tbe attorneys for litigants bad able and exhaustive briefs, but we do not think it necessary to go further into detail. For tbe reasons given, tbe judgment of tbe court below is
Affirmed.