66 So. 897 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1914
The first and second counts of the complaint were framed under subdivision 1, and the fourth count under subdivision 2, of the Employers’ Liability Act. (Code, § 3910) ; while the third count asserts a
In the first count it is alleged that the defendant was engaged in manufacturing stoves, and that, while plaintiff was in the performance of his duties in connection therewith, a molding flask containing molten iron broke, gave way, or leaked, thereby causing the iron to run against and injure him, “which injuries were proximately caused by reason of a defect in the condition of the ways, works, machinery, or plant connected with, or used in, the business of the defendant, which arose from or had not been discovered or remedied owing to the negligence of the defendant or some person in its service or employment intrusted by it with the duty of seeing that its ways, ivorks, machinery, or plant were in proper condition, in this, that said flask was defective.” -
The second count is simply an adoption in toto of the first, with the additional averment that the flask was defective “in that it was old, and worn, and leaky, and weak.”
It was insisted by demurrer that counts 1 and 2 were defective: (1) In failing to aver that the breaking or leaking of the flask was the proximate cause of the injury; and (2) that the averment of the defect was too general, and no causal connection between the defect and the injury was shown.
It appears sufficiently clear from the averment that the molten iron escaped and came in contact with the plaintiff in consequence and as the proximate result of the alleged defective condition of the flask in use as a part of the ways, works, machinery, or plant of the defendant about which the plaintiff was at work. These counts are readily distinguishable from the one condemned in the case of Huyck v. McNerney, 163 Ala. 244,
The averment of negligence, especially in the first count, is indeed very general, but it does not differ materially from that approved by the Supreme Court in the case of Jackson Lumber Co. v. Cunningham, 141 Ala. 206, 37 South. 445, although, as the court later said, the ruling in that case went to the limit of generality of pleading, and would not be extended. — T. C., I. & R. R. Co. v. Smith, 171 Ala. 251, 55 South. 170.
The exception taken to the third count is that it exacts too high a degree of care on the part of the defendant with respect to the furnishing of the appliances for the plaintiff’s use; that defendant’s duty was not absolute, but only to exercise reasonable care. The gist of the averment is that the defendant “negligently failed to furnish the plaintiff with a reasonably safe appliance with which to work,” etc. It would seem that, if the defendant negligently failed to furnish a reasonably safe appliance, it therefore necessarily failed to exercise reasonable care in that regard and conversely, if it exercised due care in the furnishing of a reasonably safe appliance, it could not be said that it acted negligently.— Coosa Pipe Foundry Co. v. Poindexter, 182 Ala. 656, 62
The demurrer to the special replication, as an answer to pleas 2, 3, and 4, was sustained, and not overruled, as is assumed by counsel for appellant. It was overruled only in so far as the replication purported to answer plea No. 5. Plea No. 5 alleges, in substance, that the plaintiff assumed the risk, in that the condition of the flask was well known to him at the time of the injury; yet he failed to make any complaint or to give any information thereof to the defendant or to some person superior to plaintiff in the service of the defendant. The replication, in response to this, says the defendant or such superior already knew of the defect. The proviso in section 3910 expressly relieves the servant of the duty to impart such information if the fact is already known to the defendant or to such superior. The pleas were filed to each count of the complaint separately and severally. The replication was a sufficient reply to plea 5 as an answer to counts 1 and 2, but not as an answer to count 3. The replication, however, was interposed to pleas 2, 3, 4, and 5 collectively, and not separately or severally. Manifestly, it was not good as to pleas 2, 3, and 4 as the court held, but the manner in which it was framed rendered it bad in toto. The demurrer seems to point out this defect, and should have been sustained.
The fourth count of the complaint ascribes the plaintiff’s injuries to the negligence of the superintendent, one Stockman, “whilst in the exercise of such superintendence, in that he negligently caused the plaintiff to receive his said injuries.” The only superintendence intrusted to Stockman which the evidence tends to reveal was that of remedying defects in the molding flasks when the existence of such defects was reported to him by the defendant. There was no system of inspection by
If a superintendent or superior servant is charged with the duty of making necessary repairs of a particular instrumentality, but exercises no supervision over the manner of performance or the immediate details of the servant’s use thereof, if the instrumentality is intrinsically defective and injury proximately results therefrom, even though in the presence of the superior, the case falls clearly within the influence of subdivision 1 of section 3910. If, however, such superintendent or superior, in the discharge of his duty, becomes a factor in the use of the instrumentality by the injured employee, either by the giving of negligent instructions connected with such use or by negligently causing some omission more or less immediately connected, in point of time, with the accident, and which is proximately responsible for the injury, such servant, in that event, has been negligent “whilst in the exercise of such superintendence,” and the case comes within the influence of subdivision 2 of that section.
Giving to each of these subdivisions its legitimate field of operation, no other conclusion can be satisfactorily reached. The evidence affords no inference of any negligent act of superintendence on the part of Stock-
Special charge No. 20, requested by. appellant, as follows: “If any one juror be not reasonably satisfied from the evidence that plaintiff is entitled to recover, you cannot find for the plaintiff” — should have been-given, and its refusal constitutes reversible error. — B. R., L. & P. Co. v. Humphries, 171 Ala. 291, 54 South. 613; B. R., L. & P. Co. v. Goldstein, 181 Ala. 517, 61 South. 281. A somewhat similar charge Avas held good in the case of B. R., L. & P. Co. v. Moore, 148 Ala. 128, 42 South. 1024, but the Supreme Court in the Goldstein Case, supra, overruled the Moore Case on that point, because, it Avas said, the charge was so Avorded as to confuse the amount of damage Avith the plaintiffs right to a verdict Avhen the question most strongly litigated Asms the amount of damages, rather than the right of plaintiff to a verdict. The charge here is not at all subject to'that criticism. The question here chiefly and quite sharply litigated was the right vel non of the plaintiff to a verdict, and the charge was simply an instruction that no verdict should be returned for the plaintiff unless the jury had unanimously agreed. It was said in the Goldstem Case: “In civil or criminal cases, unanimity of the jury is essential to a verdict,” and that “charges Avhich assert the,above proposition, and this only, should be given.” Charge 20 is well within the above rule. The principle is a sound and an im
There was no error in refusing the general affirmative charge as to count 3. True it is that at common law the master, if in the first instance he exercised due care in furnishing the servant with place, ways, and appliances reasonably safe for use, may delegate the duty of maintaining such conditions to agents prudently selected for competency and fitness, but one phase of the evidence tends to show that the flask in question had been only recently furnished and was practically new at the .time of the injury, and yet another that it was defective. It does not appear when the defect arose. This may have justified an inference that it was defective in the first instance.
The general affirmative charge was properly refused. There was some evidence, however uncertain or unsatisfactory, from which the jury might have drawn an inference that the plaintiff’s injury was the proximate result of the negligence complained of. Its sufficiency was, of course, a question of fact for the determination of the jury. There was likewise no prejudicial error in refusing the affirmative charge as to count No. 2.
For the errors pointed out, the judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.