25 S.E. 783 | N.C. | 1896
(FAIRCLOTH, C. J., and FURCHES, J., dissent.) The plaintiff claimed $13.05 for work and labor done for defendants. (82)
The defendants set up counterclaim for $15.30 for services of themselves and twenty hands in putting out fire which the defendant alleges was ignited by the carelessness of the plaintiff while cutting lumber in woods for defendants.
His Honor, being of opinion that a counterclaim sounding in tort could not be maintained in this action, gave judgment for plaintiff, and defendant appealed. The plaintiff sued the defendants for work and labor done in cutting timber trees. The defendants offered, as a counterclaim, *50 to show that the plaintiff, while so engaged at work for defendants, negligently permitted fire to escape, damaging the defendants, who were put also to much expense to put out the fire to prevent greater damage. The sole question is whether the damage caused by the negligence of the plaintiff while engaged in work for defendants is a counterclaim in an action for compensation for such work.
The spirit of The Code is to prevent multiplicity of actions, and by section 244, subsection (1), a tort can be pleaded as a counterclaim to an action either in contract or tort, if "connected with the subject of the action." The subject of the action here is cutting timber for the defendants. Injury sustained from carelessness of the plaintiff while doing work for defendants is held to be "connected with the subject of the action," in an action by the workman for his wages. Eaton v. Wooly,
It is not necessary to consider here whether the measure of damages is the cost of putting out the escaped fire, as the defendants seem to have intended to claim, for the judge rejected entirely, as not allowable, the defendant's offer to set up as a counterclaim that they had been damaged by the negligence of plaintiff while prosecuting the work for which he seeks to recover pay. It would seem that this was "connected with the subject-matter of the action," and that justice and the terms of The Code would permit the whole matter to be settled in one action. In rejecting evidence to sustain such counterclaim there was
ERROR.
Cited: Smith v. Loan Assn., post, 261; Slaughter v. Machine Co.,
(84)