81 So. 358 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1919
The first and second assignments of error are based upon the rulings of the trial court on demurrer to the complaint. These assignments are not considered for the reason that there is no judgment on demurrer shown in the record that will support an appeal. What purports to be a copy of the judge's bench notes appears, but this is not sufficient and is not a judgment of the court.
The facts in this case are very similar to the statement of facts as set out in the opinion of Mr. Justice Thomas in the case of Amerson v. Coronoa Coal Iron Co.,
Upon the trial, after the court had given its oral charge to the jury, the defendant the Coal City Mining Corporation excepted to that part of the court's oral charge as follows:
"If you believe under the evidence in the case that plaintiff is entitled to recover, then you must determine from this evidence whether he is entitled to recover; he cannot recover under the evidence in the case against the mining corporation and also against these other four defendants."
The same defendant excepted to the following portion of the court's oral charge:
"If the four defendants were independent contractors and injured this plaintiff, they are liable, and the mining company would not be; if they were not independent contractors and the mining company was operating the mine, then the mining company would be liable, and these other defendants would not be."
The same defendant also excepted to the following excerpt from the court's oral charge:
"Under the evidence in this case, the burden of proof is on the defendant corporation to show that it was not operating that mine."
The same defendant also requested the court, in writing, to give the general affirmative charge in its behalf, which the court refused to do.
The plaintiff sued as an employé, and as a basis of his right of recovery alleged in both counts of his complaint that he was employed by the "defendants." That includes all of the defendants. If the complaint had alleged that the plaintiff was employed by the Coal City Mining Corporation "or" Crump et als., the complaint would have been demurrable on account of a misjoinder of parties defendant. The plaintiff would not be allowed to sue two separate and distinct employers in the same action, and, having alleged that he was the employé of all the defendants, it became his duty to so prove; the burden resting upon him. Warrior-Pratt Coal Co. v. Shereda,
It is a principle, well established and recognized, that in actions in tort, where two or more are jointly sued as defendants, according to the proof, a recovery may be had as to all or to any number less than all; but this rule is not without its exception, as, for instance, where the action is in case for a negligent performance, or for a negligent failure to perform, a duty arising out of a contract, whereby injury and damage results. In such a case, the averment of the contract from which the alleged duty to plaintiff arose is made a material allegation of the complaint which must be proven as charged, or else there is a fatal variance between the allegation and the proof. Hackney et al. v. Perry,
If, then, as was charged by the court in its oral charge, there was not sufficient evidence to justify the jury in returning a verdict in favor of the plaintiff as against all of the defendants, the appellant here was entitled to the affirmative charge; but, if there was sufficient evidence from which the jury might have arrived at the conclusion that all of the defendants were liable to the plaintiff, then the court was in error in the several particulars as pointed out by the appellant in exceptions to the oral charge as herein above set out.
The trial court was doubtless led into error on account of the opinion in the case of Oden-Elliott Lumber Co. v. Rowe,
It is undoubtedly the rule in this state that a master employing an independent contractor is not liable for an injury to an employé of the independent contractor who was under the direction and control of the independent contractor at the time of the injury (Porter v. T. C. I. R. R. Co.,
The other questions presented by the record will probably not arise on another trial, and therefore are not considered.
Reversed and remanded.