82 So. 444 | Ala. | 1919
The evidence in regard to the operation of this mine and plaintiff's connection therewith is very similar to that considered in the case of Amerson v. Corona Coal Coke Co.,
Count 3, upon which the cause was tried, rested for recovery upon the breach of the statutory duties set out in section 38 of an act of 1911 (page 500). The complaint in every particular followed the very language of this section of said act, and at least substantially stated the cause of action thereunder. It charged that the defendants were operating said mine at the time, and discloses that the plaintiff was rightfully there as a workman in the discharge of his duties. While it does not allege that the plaintiff was an employé of the defendants, yet the provisions of said section do not require such relationship, if in fact the defendants were in the actual operation of said mine and the plaintiff was rightfully working therein. To hold, that notwithstanding the defendants were actually operating the mine, yet the relation of employer and employé must exist before the workman can seek recovery under the provisions of said section, would be, in our opinion, interposing language in said section not placed there by the Legislature, and placing a restrictive interpretation upon the statute which was intended for the preservation and protection of human life.
Whether or not the complaint was subject to demurrer we need not stop to inquire, for if so it would be only of a technical character easily remedied by amendment; the cause being reversed for other reasons.
The defendants interposed numerous special pleas, in which it was attempted to set up contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff as a defense to this cause of action. These pleas were demurred to upon the ground, among others, that the duty to furnish props is mandatory, and contributory negligence was no answer to said count. The demurrer was sustained. This was error. While the statute has been construed as mandatory (Stith Coal Co. v. Sanford,
The pleas are numerous, and need not be here treated in detail to ascertain if any of them were subject to demurrer. Those setting up the defenses above referred to were clearly sufficient without regard to any of the other pleas, and their elimination must work a reversal of the cause. Indeed, as we read the brief of counsel for appellee, it is not very seriously contended that the ruling of the court in eliminating some of these defenses, above referred to, was free from error; but the insistence is made that it is without injury, and therefore reversal should not be rested upon this ruling. By this action of the court, the defendants were not permitted to interpose very substantial defenses, and the oral charge of the court discloses that the jury were only instructed *196 as to the law upon the third count and the general issue thereto.
The evidence in the case has been very carefully examined in connection with the oral charge of the court, and we fail to discover anything in the record justifying the assumption that the defendants received the benefit of these special pleas in the trial of this cause. We think it quite clear that the error is not one without injury, but, on the contrary, that it injuriously affected the substantial rights of the defendants. For this error the judgment of the court below is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
MAYFIELD, SOMERVILLE, and THOMAS, JJ., concur.
ANDERSON, C. J., and McCLELLAN and SAYRE, JJ., concur in conclusion and in opinion, except as to what is said in regard to sufficiency of count 3; it being their opinion that count 3 was subject to demurrer on the authority of Alverson v. Little Cahaba Coal Co.,