84 So. 827 | Ala. | 1919
Previous appeals in the course of this litigation are reported in Louisville N. R. R. Co. v. Gray,
The injured employé, Gray, instituted his action for damages on October 7, 1912, approximately 44 days after the date on which he was injured. There were two trials of his action in the court below, and reversal by this court of the judgment in each. The original complaint, together with its amendment, effected while the original plaintiff was living, consisted of five counts. In none or them was it averred in any way that Gray was, when injured, engaged in a service referable, discriminatively, either to intra- or interstate commerce. All of these counts were, as we interpret them, silent in that respect. The interpolation therein of an averment that the engine upon which Gray was at the time at work was an instrumentality of the carrier's service in interstate commerce would not have introduced an allegation inconsistent with any other averment in these five counts. The averment common to these five counts, that the defendant operated a line of railway through Morgan county, Ala., or through the town in which its shops were located, was an allegation not at all inconsistent with the interstate service expressly averred in counts 4 and 5, introduced by an amendment allowed by the court below after the death of the plaintiff, Gray.
It is true this court on last appeal referred to counts composing the original complaint, and its amendments effected during the life of the original plaintiff, as declaring upon causes of action under the Alabama employers' liability statute (Code 1907, § 3910); but this pronouncement did not involve the discriminative consideration that is now required, there being no suggestion in the record on either of the trials in the court below, or on review here, that the service in which Gray was engaged when he was injured was related in any way to interstate commerce, and hence subject to the control of the federal Employers' Liability Act (U.S. Comp. St. §§ 8657-8665). So the amended complaint stood at the time of the death of the original plaintiff, employé, as not expressly declaring upon or under the Alabama or the federal statute, but as, and only, averring *629
facts descriptive of the quo modo and means of his injury, and attributing the injury to culpable conduct or omission of co-employés whose particular dereliction, if established, may have been such under either the Alabama or the federal act, provided the evidence subsequently taken did not assign their asserted faults to the control, paramount and exclusive (Ex parte A. C. L. R. Co.,
It appears from the record that the death of the original plaintiff was suggested to the trial court wherein this action was pending on January 6, 1917, approximately 6 months after the death of the original plaintiff. On that date, January 6, 1917, the court ordered "that said cause be revived in the name of the personal representative, when made known." The Alabama statute governing the revivor of actions in these circumstances requires the suggestion of death and motion to revive to be submitted to the court in which the case is pending within 12 months after the death of the party, and it has been expressly decided that the actual judgment of revival need not enter within the 12 months period, in order to perfect the substitution of the personal representative for the original party. Ex parte Meador,
The amendment, allowed and effected on July 23, 1918, by Gray's personal representative (appellee), introduced, as stated, counts 4 and 5. The verdict of the jury referred and restricted the conclusion of liability to these counts (4 and 5), alone. Count 4 ascribed Gray's injury in August, 1912, and his death in 1916 from that injury, to the negligence of a hostler, Taylor, in moving a live engine against the unattached and slightly separated tender of the dead engine (assigned to and used in interstate service) upon which Gray was averred to have been then engaged in repair work at the roundhouse of the defendant. Count 5, after like allegation of the facts, ascribed Gray's injury, and death 4 years later, to the negligence of defendant's foreman, Weatherly, in directing the hostler to move the live engine against the tender of this dead engine without proper care to warn Gray, or to conserve the safety of Gray, whose presence about the dead engine, in a position of danger if it was moved, was known, or should, by the exercise of due diligence, have become known, to Weatherly before he gave the order or signal to the hostler Taylor, to move his engine to an impact with the nearby tender of the dead engine.
Under our practice, motion to strike, not demurrer, is the appropriate method to eliminate a court improperly added by amendment. Springfield Ins. Co. v. De Jarnett,
The rulings of the trial court, allowing the amendment adding counts 4 and 5, overruling the motion to strike these counts, and refusing general affirmative instructions against a recovery upon these counts, were correctly made, under the doctrine of the authority afforded by St. Louis, etc., Ry. v. Craft,
Section 9 of the amended (in 1910) federal Employers' Liability Act provides:
"That any right of action given by this act to a person suffering injury shall survive to his or her personal representative, for the benefit of the surviving widow or husband and children of such employé, and, if none, then of such employé's parents; and, if none, then of the next of kin dependent upon such employé, but in such cases there shall be only one recovery for the same injury."
It is manifest from the very terms of this section (9) that the cause of action upon which Gray declared in 1912, and which he sought for approximately 4 years to have vindicated in the courts of this state, survived to his personal representative (appellee), and was not abated by Gray's death. St. Louis, etc., Ry. v. Craft, supra,
Now, the amendment affected by the addition of counts 4 and 5 asserted the personal representative's claim not only for damages Gray might have recovered had he lived, but also damages consequent upon Gray's death from the same wrong to which Gray's injuries in 1912 were ascribed in the original pleading and its amendment during Gray's lifetime. In North. Pac. Ry. v. Maerkl, supra, where the defendant's motion sought compulsory election on the part of the personal representative, in whose name revivor was effected, between the "cause of action" originally declared on by the injured employé, who died after suit brought, and the "cause of action" asserted in the amended complaint, for the death of Maerkl, the Circuit Court of Appeals held there was no duty to elect; that the amended federal act (section 9) required the personal representative to recover "in one action only," if at all, for the benefit of those specified in the statute. The theory of this decision, subsequently approved in the Craft Case, seems to have been that the amended federal act (section 9) clothed the personal representative with the authority and imposed the correlative duty, to proceed "in one action only" to enforce the two distinct claims for damages resulting from, consequent upon, the "same wrongful act or neglect." From the Craft Case, supra, we may quote this presently apt expression:
"Much stress is laid upon the concluding clause in the new section, 'but in such cases there shall be only one recovery for the same injury.' Passing and reserving the question of its application where there has been a recovery by the decedent in his lifetime (see Michigan Central R. R. v. Vreeland, supra,
In such state of statutory provision and interpretation it cannot, we think, be soundly, generally affirmed that two distinct causes of action, made so alone by the subsequent death of the injured employé are created by the federal act, where the "same wrongful act or neglect" caused both the injury and, after a legally appreciable period, the employés death. It follows that the delay, in this instance over two years after Gray's death, in introducing into the pleadings in the pending action a claim for the damages consequent upon Gray's death in June, 1916, was not offensive to the 2-year limitation fixed in section 6 of the amended federal act, did not operate a departure in law or fact, and the amendment introducing counts 4 and 5 must be referred for its relation to the time, after Gray's death, when it might first have been constituted a part of the pleading in the cause. This conclusion accords with that stated, in a pertinent particular, in B. O. R. Co. v. Smith,
This personal representative, suing through counts 4 and 5 for the benefit of Gray's widow and minor child, claims damages for the mental and physical suffering endured by Gray during the period intervening between his injury in 1912 and his death in 1916, the pecuniary loss resulting from Gray's permanent injury and consequent inability to earn money, and the loss accruing to his widow and minor child from Gray's death in 1916. The court recognized the right of the plaintiff (administrator) to recover, in the one action, for these several elements of damage. In so instructing the jury, the court conformed its direction in this particular to the amended federal Employers' Liability Act as construed in St. Louis, etc., R. Co. v. Craft, supra. These several elements of damage were correctly claimed by the personal representative as plaintiff for the benefit of the beneficiaries named in counts 4 and 5. Our case of L. N. R. Co. v. Fleming,
On former appeal (L. N. R. Co. v. Gray, 74 So. 2283) this court, after exhaustive review, thought the evidence did not sustain, in any degree, the charge that negligence characterized the conduct of the hostler, Taylor, in respect of Gray's injury. The writer, with Justice Gardner, entertained the view that the question of Taylor's culpability in the premises was properly submitted to the jury, and hence dissented. Gray having died, his evidence on former trial was recited by a competent witness. Since there is not disclosed any controlling difference between the evidence presented on last appeal and that presented on this appeal in respect of the negligence ascribed to the hostler, Taylor, in count 4 of the amended complaint, it was reversible error to refuse the general affirmative charge, requested by defendant (appellant), concluding against the right to recover under count 4 of the amended complaint; this upon the authority of pronouncements made on former appeal. 74 So. 228.3 We repeat, as declared on former appeal, that the issue of negligence vel non on the part of Weatherly, as averred in count 5 of the amended complaint, was, under the whole evidence, due to be submitted to the jury. The court did not err in refusing the general affirmative charge concluding against a recovery under count 5 of the amended complaint.
There was no error committted in the rulings on the admission of evidence. For the error indicated, the judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER, THOMAS, and BROWN, JJ., concur in the foregoing opinion.
SAYRE and SOMERVILLE, JJ., concur in the result, but dissent upon the question of the amendment effected by the appellee.