69 So. 621 | Ala. | 1915
The suit was brought for. alleged personal injuries received by appellee while in the employment of appellant.
Counts 5 and 6 were withdrawn. Appellant’s demurrer to counts 1, 2, 4, 7, and 8 was overruled, and this ruling is assigned as error.
The words, “engaged in,” as used in each count of the complaint, mean, “actively engaged in,” “employed at,” or “transacting or carrying on,” the work or business or service for which he was employed by the defendant.— 15 Cyc. 1048; 3 Words and Phrases, 2392. The words, “Such service or employment,” as used in the complaint refer to the particular service or employment which the plaintiff was engaged by the defendant to perform, or to assist in performing, to-wit, the handling of certain heavy machinery which the defendant was moving and re-setting in or at its plant or works. The words of the count, “in or about the handling or assisting in handling of certain heavy machinery,” etc., must be referred to, and are explanatory of, the employment in which the plaintiff, as a “servant or agent of the defendant,” was actively engaged when he received his alleged injuries.
The averment, then, was that a person whose name was unknown to plaintiff had superintendence over the handling of certain heavy machinery for defendant, and who, in the line of his employment by defendant, knew that plaintiff was inexperienced in the kind of work in which he was engaged, to-wit, the work “in and about” the “handling, or assisting in the handling, of certain heavy machinery;” and that this superintendent in charge, having such knowledge, negligently failed to instruct the plaintiff and his co-workers as to the proper manner and way of handling said heavy machinery. This was a sufficient averment to put upon the person having
There was no error in overruling the demurrers to the fourth, seventh, and eighth counts of the complaint.
It was not a material inquiry whether the plaintiff was able to go to one place before he was able to go to another. He had a right to go to his lawyer’s office before he went to the doctor’s office, if he wished. He
The evidence in the case at bar was that plaintiff,' when injured, was receiving $2.50 per day, that his regular trade was that of a carpenter, and that he had not been able to follow the trade since the accident in January, 1914, to the date of the trial, which was the 25th day of May of that year; that he had worked a little in April, but had to give up the job because of his injury — he could not climb on buildings, etc., like a carpenter has to climb, on account of his foot being stiff from this injury — that the only work he had done since the injury was in April, for which he was paid $2.50 per day; that he had followed the carpenter trade for 15 years before the injury.
The charge requested in writing by the defendant, and refused, was in these words: “(A) The court charges the jury, that if you believe the evidence in this case, in the event you find for the plaintiff, you cannot award him more than nominal damages for decreased earning capacity, on account of his alleged injuries.”
Among the cases in which this question was considered is that of Birmingham Railway, Light & Power Co. v. Colbert, 190 Ala. 229, 67 South. 513, wherein the plaintiff claimed damages for that his “health and physical stamina were greatly and permanently impaired” in consequence of the injury, and also for that because of the injury he was rendered for a long time unable to work and earn money; and wherein the court distinguished between the claim for “loss of time,” made under the aliegation that “for a long time he was unable to work and earn money,” and the claim for his “diminished or decreased earning capacity,” because his health and physical stamina were greatly and permanently impaired.” It was there held that a charge like that requested in this case should have been given. So, in Birmingham Railway, Light & Power Company v. Friedman, 187 Ala. 562, 65 South. 939, where it was averred that in consequence of the injuries described, plaintiff “has been, and will in the future be, rendered less able to earn a livelihood and perform her usual avocation,” the charge in question was held proper. — Sloss-Sheffield Steel & Iron Co. v.
The evidence did not furnish sufficient data upon which the plaintiff’s future earning capacity could he determined with reasonable accuracy. He was therefore entitled to recover no more than nominal damages for his decreased earning capacity; and, for the failure to give charge A, the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.
If the question involved in this reversal were a new one, the writer confesses that he could not consent to the decision.
The two cases cited by appellant are not in point. In Alabama Great Southern Railroad Co. v. Whorton, 184 Ala. 439, 63 South. 1016, the evidence showed that the plaintiff based his right of recovery on the insufficiency of the help furnished to load the car, and not on the danger of the place where he was working, and in Sloss-
It is contended the averment that the superintendent negligently failed to instruct the plaintiff and his co-workers as to the manner- of handling or moving the heavy machinery charged two acts of negligence, and that the proof went no further than to show the failure to instruct plaintiff. The .evidence is to the point that the work Avas being carried on in the manner prescribed by the superintendent — with improvised wooden pinch bars and without rollers, and without block and tackle. The witness Pierce testified that it was improper to do the work without rollers; that at first they tried -to get the block and tackle with which to' move the machinery and, failing in this, fashioned the wooden scantlings into improvised pinch bars, instead of providing and using iron pinch bars. It was a single act of negligence
There was no error in the refusal of the affirmative charges as to the several counts.
The judgment of the lower court is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.