21 A. 341 | R.I. | 1891
This is case for damages for injuries received by the plaintiff, an employee of the defendant company, while at work as such at the company's gas works, in consequence of an explosion in or from a tank or receptacle excavated in the ground near where he was at work. The declaration contains three counts. The first alleges that the tank was in the yard of the company's premises; the second and third further allege that it was used by the company as an appliance or instrument in its business of making illuminating gas, in and about which business the plaintiff was employed. The first two counts allege the cause of the explosion to have been some defect in the tank or in the approaches to or connections with the same, of which the plaintiff had no knowledge nor means of knowledge, but of which the defendant well knew or was bound to know, which defect was caused or occasioned by the negligence of the defendant. The three counts are severally demurred to. The causes of demurrer assigned in the brief for the company are that the counts "do not anywhere set forth wherein the defect in the apparatus consisted, or how the defendant was bound to know it, or wherein the defendant's negligence consisted."
The brief cites Smith v. Tripp,
We think the objection that the allegation that the defendant knew or was bound to know of the existence of the defect is bad, because it does not set forth how it was bound, is well taken. To allege so is not to allege fact but legal conclusion. The proper allegation is, that the defendant knew, or but for the want of reasonable *201
care and diligence would have known, of the defect. Noyes v.Smith Lee,
The third count sets forth the circumstances of the explosion and the consequent injury substantially as they are set forth in the second count, but it contains no allegation of negligence on the part of the company. It may be that a jury, on proof of the facts alleged, would infer that the explosion occurred in consequence of the company's negligence, in the absence of any counter testimony, but nevertheless, the company's negligence is a fact to be proved by the plaintiff, either directly or inferentially, in order to recover, it being indeed the very gist of the action, and as such it must be alleged, or appear by legal intendment from what is alleged. The demurrer to the third count is therefore sustained.
Demurrers to first and second counts overruled afteramendments of such counts as above indicated. Demurrer to thirdcount sustained.