17 Ga. App. 69 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1915
This action was brought to recover damages for injuries received by the plaintiff in starting a hand-car operated by a gasoline motor, and is expressly based on section 3910, volume 2, of the Code of Alabama, by the terms of which an employer is liable for personal injuries received by his servant or employee while in the service or business of the master, (1) when the injury is caused by reason of any defect in the condition of the ways, works, machinery, or plant connected with, or used in the business of, the master or employer; (2) when the injury is caused by reason of the negligence of any person in the employment of the master who has superintendence intrusted to him and while in the exercise of such superintendence; (3) when such injury is caused by reason of the negligence of any person in the employment of the master, to whose orders or directions the servant or employee, at the time of the injury, was bound to conform, and did conform, if such injury resulted from his having so conformed; (4) when such injury is caused by the reason of the act or omission of any person in the service or employment of the master in obedience to the rules, regulations or by-laws of the master, or in obedience to particular instructions given by any person delegated with the authority of the master in that behalf; (5) when such injury is caused by reason of the negligence of any person in the service or employment of the master who has charge of any' signal, points, locomotive, engine, electric motor, switch, car, or train upon a railway, or of any part of the track of a railway.
A great deal has been said in the written argument as to the pertinency of the Federal employer’s liability act, and as to whether the Federal statute is applicable to the case at bar. However, we shall treat the case as if the Federal employer’s liability act were inoperative, and shall consider the merit of the petition to withstand the demurrer solely in connection with the Alabama law upon which the suit is expressly based. It is well settled that statutes of a foreign jurisdiction are to be given the construction which is applied to them by the courts of last resort of the
According to the allegations of the petition, the plaintiff intended to go to a place called Pansey, to meet the pay^car.of the defendant, and he was at the same time to take his customary noon rest. We think the demurrer could properly have been sustained because of the insufficiency of the allegations of negligence, and the failure to show such a concurrence of negligence of the defendant with the operative cause of the plaintiff’s injury as to entitle the servant to recover damages from his employer. To authorize a recovery, there must concur, first, negligence; second, the negligence must be imputable to the master; and, third, it must be the proximate eause%of the injury. Construing the allegations of the petition strictly, it is clear that the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injury was a hole fourteen inches deep which had been temporarily excavated between cross-ties for the purpose of filling in the track with ballast. But for the existence of the hole the plaintiff would not have fallen, even if the negro employee in charge of the motor was unskillful and inexperienced, and even if there had been time for the brake to have been applied. But for the hole into which the plaintiff stumbled, there would have been no fall which could be attributable, under the allegations of the petition, to negligence on the part of the defendant. The hole, as described in the petition, was not such a
Again, the petition, of course, is to be strictly construed, and if its allegations are subject to two constructions, the one adverse to the pleader is to be adopted. It does not appear that the defendant had- any interest in the plaintiff’s collecting his pay, even if the purpose of the plaintiff’s visit to Pansey was for the purpose