108 Me. 189 | Me. | 1911
This was an action on the case to recover damages for an injury suffered by the plaintiff while operating a circular saw in the defendant’s shoe factory for the purpose of cutting and splitting boards and shooks into narrow strips.
It is alleged in the declaration that the "saw was operated in the regular and customary way by an experienced person by fastening a board with a straight edge along the side of the saw as a sort of guage and at a distance from it equal to the strips to be cutthat it was "dangerous to press the board against the revolving saw the last eight or ten inches to be cut for the reason that there was spots or places in the boards where the wood was harder than other places and when the revolving saw reached these hard places there was the liability that the board being cut would be thrown up from the saw table with great force and suddenness and that practically the same result would follow if the board used as a guage was not properly fastened; and the same result would also follow if the saw had not been properly sharpened and was dull so that the set of the teeth of the saw were out of order so as to cause the board being cut to bind against the saw blade.”
The alleged failure of duty on the part of the defendant is thus set forth in the declaration : "The plaintiff says that at the time he was set to work upon said saw by said defendant as herein stated said saw was dull and had not been sharpened for a long period of time, although the same had been in use, and that the set of the teeth of said saw was irregular and out of order so that there was great tendency and liability that the boards being cut and split thereon would bind against the sides of said saw blade and be
"1. That plaintiff does not allege wherein the defendant was negligent and thereby caused the injury described in his declaration.
2. That plaintiff does not allege any causal connection between any negligence averred and injury received.
3. That the plaintiff alleging two distinct conditions which he claims might cause the accident, namely that the saw described in the declaration was dull, and that the set of the teeth was irregular and out of order, does not allege which condition actually caused the accident, or that the accident was not caused by his own act described in his declaration in fastening a straight edged board for a guage near the saw blade.
4. That said declaration is double.”
It is the opinion of the court that the objection of duplicity in the plaintiff’s declaration, raised by the demurrer must be sustained. Under the established rules of pleading the plaintiff’s declaration must contain a clear and distinct averment of the facts which constitute the cause of action, and set them out with that degree of certainty of which the nature of the matter pleaded reasonably admits, in order that they may be understood by the party who is to answer them, by the jury who are to ascertain the truth of the allegations and by the court that is to give judgment. 1 Chitty on Pl. 256; Dean v. Ayers, 67 Maine, 488-9. As said by the court in Addison v. Railway Co., 48 Mich. 155, "a declaration for a railway injury is demurrable if it does not so state the cause of action that the defendant could, with reasonable certainty, ascertain in what respect it is charged with negligence, or if it does not count specifically upon some particular duty and breach thereof, as causing the injury. It is not enough to refer to matters in an uncertain, doubtful and ambiguous manner, as a kind of general drag to meet whatever evidence may be presented.” According to the common law rule the plaintiff cannot sustain a single demand by proof of "two or more distinct grounds or matters each of which independently of the other, amounts to a good cause
In Laporte v. Cook, 20 R. I. 261, an action on the case for negligence, the declaration was held bad for duplicity because it set up "several distinct and independent breaches of duty, viz. (1) neglect to furnish proper safeguards for the protection of the plaintiff; (2) neglect to give him suitable instructions, and (3) neglect to provide proper persons to take charge of the work.” Each of these allegations, the court said, should be made the subject of a separate count if the plaintiff desired to rely upon it.
In the case at bar it has been seen that the plaintiff’s declaration consisting of a single count, sets out three distinct and separate breaches of duty on the part of the defendant, any one of which, if proved, would have been sufficient to support a verdict for the plaintiff. It alleges that the "board was thrown or jumped upwards from the saw table because of the conditions hereinbefore set forth; ” and the conditions which had been "hereinbefore set forth to the great carelessness and negligence of the defendant” were, (1) dullness of the saw teeth ; (2) irregularity in the set of the saw teeth, and (3) failure of the defendant to give the plaintiff necessary instructions how to operate the saw. Each of these three breaches of duty thus alleged might require a specific and distinct answer, and different evidence to meet it. Each if proven by the plaintiff might constitute a complete cause of action. Each of them should
The certificate must therefore be,
Fxceptions sustained.
Demurrer sustained.