42 So. 1019 | Ala. | 1906
This is a suit by the plaintiff [appellee) against the defendant, Creóla Lumber Company, a corporation, to recover damages for a personal injury suffered by liiln while in the defendant’s employment as a brakeman. The complaint as it ivas originally filed contains' three counts. Two counts were afterwards added by amendment. The court, at the request of the
The first count is grounded on the second subdivision of section 17.49 of the code of 1896. This count alleges that the defendant was engaged in operating a train' propelled by steam for hauling logs near Creola, in Mobile1 county, and employed an engineer and fireman, and the plaintiff to operate.said log train. From these allegations, in connection with subdivision 2 of section 1749 of the code of 1896, there arose a. duty on the part of the defendant to the plaintiff to see to it that he was not inured by the negligence of any person, in the service of the defendant, who had superintendence intrusted to him, while in the exercise of such superintendence. —K. C., M. & B. R. R. Co. v. Burton, 97 Ala. 241, 12 South. 88. This count, after alleging that plaintiff was working under the .engineer, Frank Driesbach, alleges that said Driesbach was intrusted by defendant.with the superintendence of the operation of said log train and of the plaintiff, and that while the plaintiff was engaged in the service of defendant in operating the log train he was injured, setting forth the nature and extent of the injury.- Them follows this averment, namely: “And the plaintiff avers that said injuries were caused by'reason of the negligence of said engineer (Driesbach) whilst in the exercise of such superintendence aforesaid.” . ,
One insistence of the appellant is that the count does not advise the defendant whether it must defend against- negligence on the part of the engineer as such, or negligence on the part of the same man in his capacity as superintendent of the plaintiff. We think this criticism of the count is without foundation, for the
The second count of the complaint,’ after averring, substantially as was done in the first count, the relation of master and servant existing between the defendant and .plaintiff,, the superintendence of Driesbaeh, and plaintiff’s injury, ascribes the injury to the negligence of Driesbaeh in this language; “And the plaintiff avers that said injuries Avert1 caused by reason of the negligence of said Frank Driesbaeh, who Avas in the service of employment of the .defendant,, and to AAdrose orders or directions the plaintiff at the time of the injury aforesaid Avas bound to conform, and did conform, and said injuries resulted from his having so conformed, and whilst said Frank Driesbaeh was in the exercise of such -superintendence aforesaid.” This count is based on subdivision 3 of section 1749 of the code of 1890, and the question is Avhether it is sufficient as against the demurrer, filed to it, AA-liich is the same demurrer as that filed to the first count. With respect to the demurrer to the second count it is insisted in the brief of appellants^ First, that the count combines the allegations required1
In respect to the first insistence it is sufficient to say that it is no objection to the count under this subdivision that it avers that the negligence complained of was that of a certain employe of the defendant, who was an engineer, and who had superintendence intrusted to him in respect to the operation of the train. This, as was said in Kansas City, Memphis & Birmingham. R. R. Co. v. Burton, 97 Ala., at top of page 249, 12 South., at page 92, “is not the averment of different wrongs and causes of action, but merely the statement of the relations of the negligent person to the defendant.” The gravamen of the count is the injury resulting from plaintiff haying conformed to an order giAren by an employe of the defendant to whose orders plaintiff Avas bound to conform. The. first insistence is, therefore, without merit. — Southern Car & Foundry Co. v. Bartlett, 137 Ala. 234, 34 South. 20. It has been determined by this court that, in a count based on subdivision 3 of section 1749, the 'order' given and conformed to should be aArerrod. and it should also be averred that the order Avas negligently given. — Bear Creek Mill Co. v. Parker, 134 Ala. 301, 32 South. 700; Southern Car Co. v. Bartlett, 137 Ala. 234, 34 South 20; Dantzler v. Debardeleben Coal & Iron Co., 101 Ala. 309, 14 South. 10, 22 L. R. A. 361. Count 2 fails in these respects, and the demurrer should have been sustained, as without the averments mentioned the count fails to state a cause of action. — Cases supra.
The fourth count as last amended is based on subdivision 5 of section 1749 of the code of 1896, Avhiclr pro-Andes for recovery of damages sustained by personal injury, “Avhen such injury is caused by reason of the neg
There are many pleas to the different counts of the complaint, but, following our rule Avitli reference to omission by appellant’s counsel to insist on errors assigned, Ave will only consider the rulings of the court on the demurrers to pleas numbered 4 and 5 and plea B. It cannot he said as a conclusion of laAV that under all circumstances it is negligence for an employe, a brakeman, to dismount from a moving train and attempt to get upon the locomotive propelling the tiain, even though the act of dismounting should he unnecessary. Plea 4 fails to set out facts which on their face show contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff, and the demurrer was properly sustained. — Birmingham Ry. & Elec. Co. v. Brannon, 132 Ala. 431, 31 South. 523; Watkins v. Birmingham Ry. & Elec. Co., 120 Ala. 152, 24 South. 392, 43 L. R. A. 297; Osborne v. Ala. Steel & Wire Co., 135 Ala. 571, 33 South. 687.
The fifth plea is not subject to the demurrer assigned to it, and the court improperly sustained the demurrer. But issue was joined on pleas 3 and “d,” and it is insisted for the appellee that these pleas set up the same, or substantially the same, defense as is set up by plea
Plea B is in this language: “That plaintiff contributed pioximately to the injury complained of, in that he negligently attempted to get upon the locomotive Of defendant while the same was in motion.” “To withstand an appropriate demurrer, the plea of contributory negligence must go beyond averring negligence: as a conclusion, and must aver a state of facts to which the law attaches that conclusion.” — Osborne v. Ala. Steel & Wire Co., 135 Ala. 571, 33 South. 687. The expression in the plea “that he negligently attempted” is but the conclusion of the pleader, and the facts averred in connection with it .are not such as the law attaches the conclusion of negligence to. The demurier was properly sustained to plea B.
Issue was joined on the general issue, and special pleas 3, “c,” “d,” “i,” and “k.” At the time the plaintiff received the injury complained of, he was a. brakeman in the employ of the defendant on a log train of the defendant, which-consisted of a small-geared locomotive and two skeleton cars loaded with saw logs. The two cars were in front- of and were being pushed by the locomotive. This train was used for the purpose of car
Concerning the facts above recited there is no dispute in the evidence. In addition to the understood facts, the plaintiff, who ivas the only witness in his own behalf, testified that on the morning of the accident, when they were about 150 feet from the bottom of the grade, the engineer gave the signal of two or three short blasts of the whistle, and when the plaintiff looked back the engineer gave him the sam sign that he always gave him to put sand on the track, and. the plaintiff then got off the train, and went back to where, the sand was, and took hold of the rod of the running board, and liis foot slipped between the footboaid and the tender trucks, under the engine', and was cut. off. He testified the train was running downgrade, and it did not look “anyways” too dangerous to catch it, and it seemed that it needed sand before getting at the steepest part of the grade; that such was the reason that he. made back at. the time; that it didn’t look “overly fast” — not too fast to catch. He testified, on cross-examination, that he did not know positively how fast the train was going at the time, but to his judgment about eight miles an hour; that it was noways too fast or dangeious for him to catch it at the time. He also' testified that, when -he looked back to the engineer, the sign which the engineer gave him was by pointing his finger forward and downward, and then it was he got off the. train, that being the sign the engineer usually gave him to sand the. track, and at that time the train was 150 feet from the bottom of the grade and was running in an “ordinary sort, of way”; that the track Avas wet, and none of the brakes Avere on. The foregoing evidence has been carefully and attentively considered. It is the only evidence in the ease that the plaintiff can rely on for recovery.
So upon the evidence our conclusion is that the plaintiff failed to make a case for recovery under any count of the complaint, and the defendant was entitled to have given to the jury the general affirmative charge with hypothesis, as was requested by it. The foregoing conclusion renders it unnecessary for us to consider other assignments of error relating to the refusal of charges requested by the defendant and charges given for the plaintiff. It is also unnecessary to' consider the numerous assignments relating to the rulings of the court on the admissibility of evidence. We make no comments on the assignment which presents for review the action of the court in requesting plaintiff’s counsel to “draft a charge such as he thought would be appropriate to- the case as made by the pleadings and evidence.” But, in adopting this course, we must not be understood as approving the action of the court in that respect.
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.