48 Ala. 459 | Ala. | 1872
The case is a suit for damages against the appellant, by the appellee, for injuries causing the death of his intestate, under sections 2297 and 2300 of the Revised Code, There is no bill of exceptions, and the errors assigned relate to the pleadings exclusively.
The complaint charges, in substance, respecting, the issues made, in the first count, that James Dixon, the intestate, came to his death by a collision of two freight trains belonging to the defendant, in consequence of the wrongful act and culpable negligence of the engineer in charge of one of them. The second count differs from the first only in naming the engineer, and charging him with gross negligence. The third alleges that the defendant caused the death of Dixon through the culpable bad management and negligence of one or more of its officers and agents, to-wit, the general superintendent, the assistant superintendent, and the master mechanic, for retaining a subordinate officer and agent of the defendant, one John J. Roche, in the capacity of engineer of one of the trains which collided about the 4th of March, 1867, after it was brought to their knowledge before the collision, by means of one or two written reports, and by other means, of the recklessness, want of skill and culpable negligence of the said Roche as engineer, by whose wrongful acts and gross and culpable
Several grounds of demurrer were interposed to the complaint, all of which were overruled. The substance of them is, that facts showing a cause of action are not stated; none, showing a want of due care and diligence on the part of the defendant, in the selection and retention of the agent by whose negligence the collision is averred to have occurred ; the administrator of a servant or employe of the defendant can not maintain an action for the wrongful act or omission, or culpable negligence, of any officer or agent of the defendant; there is no averment that the decedent left surviving him either widow, child, or next of kin; or that he was lawfully on any train of the defendant, or in any position that gave him a right of action,
The complaint no where, states that the decedent was in the service of the defendant, or that he was on any train. Eor aught that appears, so far, he might have been a passenger, or a mere looker-on, or about the train on his own business, without connection with the defendant. As to a proper statement of facts, the collision itself, and the consequent death of Dixon, were facts sufficient to create a presumption of negligence for which the defendant was responsible, under the complaint. The failure of next of kin is a very remote possibility, as even the disability of alienage is removed by treaty with most of the nations from which we receive our immigrant population. Construing the terms of the statute alone, there is much reason for an averment of the nearest of kin. But the de
Two special pleas present the defense that the decedent received the injuries from which he died, in the course of his business as a fireman in the employment of the defendant on a train which collided with one of which Roche was the engineer, through the alleged negligence of the latter, who was his fellow-servant or employe; that the defendant exercised ordinary care and diligence to secure a prudent and skillful servant in the employment of Roche, who was reputed to be a careful and skillful engineer at the time, and supposed him to be such up to the time of the collision. A demurrer to these pleas was sustained.
The question of the sufficiency of the pleas is embarrassed, not so muoh by an uncertainty of the law, as by the difficulty of using apt expressions of discrimination. A common employer is not liable to his servant for injuries done to him by his fellow-servant in the pursuit of their common business, without fault on his part. Such fault does not exist when the tortious act is of a casual character, not inconsistent with the general competence and prudence of the offender, which the employer could not guard against by the exercise of reasonable care and diligence. His obligation to his servants does not embrace the personal undertaking for security which he promises expressly or impliedly to third persons. The servants seek their respective interests in pursuing the common business, and that nothing may abate their vigilance, they sustain their respective risks. The employer is, however, in fault when the offending servant is incompetent in skill or prudence, within his knowledge or his reasonable means of ascertaining.
As the proposition is not to charge the employer with the fault'of his servant, but with his own neglect of duty, why should a less stringent rule prevail than is applicable against him in favor of third persons, as to the degree of care and diligence he' must exercise in the selection and retention of his servants or agents? In so hazardous a business as that of the railroad, ordinary care and diligence in the selection and supervision of employes and agents
Another objection to the pleas is, that the defendant’s supposition of the fitness of the engineer, Roche, is alleged as a sufficient reason for retaining him. Suppose means no more than belief, if as much, and the latter would be wholly inadmissible, as a defense to the action, if unreasonable. A fourth plea is referred to in the judgment entry as having been rejected on demurrer, but it is not found in the transcript.
The judgment is affirmed.