57 Mich. 1 | Mich. | 1885
This is an action for assault and battery. The defendant was engineer of the Brush Electric Light Company, of Detroit, and the plaintiff was “ oiler, laborer, and helper ” under him. The plaintiff’s case was, that having, in the afternoon of the day of the occurrence, lighted the fires under the boilers, as was his duty, the defendant came in,
When the case was called for trial, the defendant objected to any evidence being given, assigning for reason that the declaration was defective. No defect was pointed out that was not amendable, if, indeed, it was a defect at all. The court allowed an amendment, and the case proceeded against the objection of the defendant.
We cannot sanction the practice of pleading to the merits, and then raising at the trial an objection in the nature of a demurrer. It is every way an inconvenient practice, and it tends to make litigation unnecessarily expensive. If a declaration fails altogether to set out a substantial cause of action, and is incapable of being made good by amendment, the objection may be taken in any stage of the proceedings; but even then, for very obvious reasons of convenience, the questions of sufficiency ought to be disposed of before parties are put to the expense of preparation for trial. Bntfif the objections to the declaration are not necessarily fatal, the défendant has no claim to the indulgence of a hearing upon them at the trial. This we have decided in previous cases. Norton v. Colgrove 41 Mich. 544; Barton v. Gray 48 Mich. 164. Analogous cases are Lamb v. Jeffrey 41 Mich. 719; Burke v. Wilber 42 Mich. 327.
The defense sought to be made in this case was that the plaintiff had assumed to start the fire under the boilers prematurely, and had got up steam to an amount that threatened a dangerous and very destructive explosion ; that defendant was greatly alarmed and excited when he discovered what had been done, and it was under the influence of his excitement and indignation at the plaintiff’s insubordination and exhibition of incompetency that the blow was struck.
The defendant complains of an unfair trial, and points to a great many little things occurring on the trial as supporting the complaint. We discover in the record no evidence which shows partiality on the part of the trial judge, but we are of
A new trial must be ordered.