124 P.2d 304 | Or. | 1942
Action by James T. Cunningham against Oregon Farmers Institute for personal injuries caused by alleged negligence of defendant. From a judgment for plaintiff, defendant appeals.
AFFIRMED. The plaintiff recovered a judgment in an action for damages for personal injuries based on negligence. The defendant, appealing, has brought to this court only the pleadings and judgment, and asserts as sole ground for reversal that the complaint, hitherto unchallenged by motion, demurrer or otherwise, does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
According to the complaint the plaintiff was tenant of an apartment in premises owned by the defendant, and was injured by an explosion of illuminating gas caused by the negligence of the defendant. It is alleged that a light fixture in the kitchen of the apartment, which extended downward from the ceiling and was equipped with two outlets at its lower end, one into which an electric light bulb could be fitted and the other having an illuminating gas jet, was in a defective condition, in that "an electric light globe placed in the socket in said kitchen light fixture would not work regardless of the position" of the wall switch *454 designed to control the flow of electricity; that defendant promised to have the fixture repaired but neglected to do so; that this fixture was connected with electric wires and a gas pipe which extended from the roof to the basement of the apartment building where they connected with the outlets of the gas company and the electric light company; "that all of the gas pipes and electric wires in said apartment building were under the exclusive control of the defendant herein".
Paragraphs VII and VIII are as follows:
The pleading concludes with allegations of injury and damage caused the plaintiff by the explosion, and a prayer for judgment.
In this jurisdiction it is sufficient in order to charge negligence to specify the act, the doing of which caused the injury, and state generally that it was negligently and carelessly done. Weinstein v. Wheeler,
The contention of counsel for defendant, however, if we understand it, is to the following effect: They say that the allegation that the light fixture was in a defective condition is a specific charge of negligence; that, therefore, the plaintiff is precluded from relying on the general charge of negligence in Paragraph VIII; that he could not establish the former without resort to the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur, and that doctrine is not available to him because the complaint itself discloses that the plaintiff was in the exclusive possession and control of the light fixture, since it was wholly within the apartment of which the plaintiff was the tenant.
The argument, in our opinion, is fallacious. Res ipsaloquitur, it is conceded, is a rule of evidence not of pleading.Boyd v. Portland Electric Co.,
This is sufficient to dispose of the case. It may be added, however, that the assumption that the allegation respecting the light fixture is a specific charge of negligence which controls over the general allegation as to the defective condition of the wires and pipe, is unwarranted. If one charges that another negligently operated an automobile and then specifies the particulars of that negligence, as, for example, that he drove on the wrong side of the highway, at a reckless rate of speed, etc., the particular charges will control over the general. Cosgrovev. Tracey,
The complaint states a cause of action and the judgment is affirmed. *457