73 So. 907 | Ala. | 1916
This case went to the jury upon counts 2, 3, and 5, the other two counts having been charged out of the case by the trial court.
(1) Count 2 is defective, and was subject to the defendant’s demurrer. The negligence or breach of duty averred should always be the proximate cause of the injury. Here the negligence charged was that Estes, the superintendent, ordered the plaintiff, a young and inexperienced employee, to operate a dangerous wringer machine, knowing that the same was dangerous and
(2) The third count was not subject to the defendant’s demurrer.
(3, 4) The special pleas, to which demurrers were sustained, 2, 3, 4, 6, and 7, are bad, such of them as merely deny the ignorance and inexperience of the plaintiff were provable under the
(5) As we view this case, it must be reversed, and it is useless to discuss all of the errors insisted upon by appellant’s counsel, as the issues can be narrowed upon the next trial. We think that the trial court should have given the general affirmative charge for the defendant as to counts 2 and 3, as they were not supported by the plaintiff’s evidence, but properly submitted count 5 to the jury. The immediate and proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injury, as made out by his evidence, was that the brake was defective, and after he had shifted the belt on the loose pulley and reached up to put on the brake, the said brake popped and slipped and threw him in the tub, causing his arm to be torn off. There is nothing whatever in the evidence tending to show that the injury was due to a want of experience or knowledge upon the part of plaintiff, as to danger not open and glaring, and to which it was the duty of the defendant’s superintendent to have warned and instructed him before putting him to work. Upon either phase of the testimony, plaintiff was .at the time over 14 years of age, and there was no proof that he was not as well developed mentally and physically as the average boy of his age. Not only was this the case, but the evidence showed that he had had considerable schooling, as well as experience in cotton mills, and his evidence disclosed by this record shows that he was a boy of considerable intelligence. In addition to this, the evidence shows that he was doing the proper thing to stop the machine when injured, and that he would not have been injured but for the popping and slipping of the brake when he attempted to apply the same, and which threw him in the tub.
(6) The plaintiff was the only eyewitness to the accident, and, according to his testimony, he was entitled to recover, under the fifth count, if the defect, that is, the worn threads, caused the popping and jumping of the brake, as the proof shows that the defendant’s superintendent knew of the defect in the brake. The defendant, however, introduced enough evidence to make it a question for the jury as to how the plaintiff was injured, and
While there are several exceptions to the rulings upon the evidence, we do not think that the trial court committed reversible error in this respect, though it could have well let the defendant ascertain, upon cross-examination, where the plaintiff was born, as that would afford the defendant with some means of ascertaining the plaintiff’s real age, but with all the counts out of the case except 5, we do not see how the exact age of the plaintiff can be material.
The judgment of *the circuit court is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Beversed and remanded.