69 So. 106 | Ala. | 1915
Action by appellee against appellant under the Employers’ Liability Act (section 3910, Code 1907). Count 1 was eliminated by demurrer, and the cause proceeded to trial upon counts 2 and 3. Count 2 is under subdivision 1 of said section 3910, charging a defect in ways, works, machinery, or plant of the defendant, in that a jigger, or small turntable, was defective. Count 3 charges plaintiff’s injury as a proximate result of negligence of one Matthews, employed by defendant and intrusted with superintendence, and while in the exercise of such superintendence, as follows: “Whilst in charge of a gang of men operating a jigger, or small turntable. Said negligence consisted in ordering the men under him to move a set of car trucks with a jigger not sufficient to hold said truck.”
The following quoted extract from the evidence offers a definition of a “jigger,” as disclosed by this record : “A jigger is a turntable which can be used from one place of the yard to another. * * * A jigger consists of two short rails bound together at the back,
And by another definition: “It consists of two angle irons which are flat on one end and about 3% inches high on the other. There is a tie in the center of the two angle irons. The flat end of the jigger is .open so that the wheels of a truck will roll upon them to the other end of the jigger, where the angle irons are about 3% inches high. There is an iron brace which runs from one angle iron to the other, parallel to the tie, which is in the center, and on the high end of the jigger a block is bolted for the purpose of keepiug trucks from running over. This jigger is used for the purpose of rolling trucks which are on the track upon the jigger, and then the jigger can be turned so as to roll the trucks off that track onto another one, and this is its purpose.”
The evidence further shows that in using the jigger it was rested upon a “block of wood” or “piece of dead wood,” as it was called, which block on this occassion was put down between the ties; and one witness for the plaintiff estimated its size as being about 26 or 3i) inches long, 5 inches thick, and 12 inches wide, and the same witness stated that the cross-ties were about 12 inches apart, and the block of wood was placed parallel with and between the cross-ties, and the ties were filled in with cinders, but did not know whether entirely or not;
The proof was without dispute that the block of wood was in good condition, with no defects whatever; that it was the proper size and the kind ordinarily used.
It was said in L. & N. Ry. Co. v. Hall, 91 Ala. 112, 8 South. 371, 24 Am. St. Rep. 863, that “something must be accorded to' diversity of judgment.” See, also, in this connection, L. & N. Co. v. Allen, 78 Ala. 494; R. & D. Ry. Co. v. Bivins, 103 Ala. 142, 15 South. 515. Mr. Labatt, in his work on Master & Servant (volume 1, § 35), says: “The true question for the jury is not whether or not the master could have done anything to prevent the injury, but whether he did anything which under the circumstances, in the exercise of ordinary care and prudence, he ought not to have done, or omitted any precaution which a prudent and careful man would or ought to have -taken. * * * A servant, therefore, will not be held to retain any verdict in his favor which is based on the hypotheses that negligence is imputable to the master because his instrumentalities or methods do not answer to the one or the other of the following descriptive epithets and phrases: ‘Best known, best possible,’ etc. * * * A fortiori is a jury not warranted in finding for the plaintiff where there is no evidence that the alternative arrangements suggested would have been safer than those actually adopted when it is apparent that the latter was reasonably safe?”
Mr. Bailey, in his work on Master and Servant (volume 1, § 162), states that: “The underlying doctrine of the master’s duty to the servant with respect to the character of the appliances furnished and place of work, as well as other duties that rest upon him, is that of ordinary care. •* * * If the machinery be of an ordinary character and such as can with reasonable care be used without danger, it is all that his duty requires ; it is sufficient if reasonably safe.”
See, also, 2 Labatt on M. & S. § 672.
In the case of Ga. Pac. Ry. v. Propst, 83 Ala. 526, 3 South. 766, speaking somewhat to this subject, it was said: “It is certainly the duty of corporations, and of all others employing. servants, to see to it that their ‘ways, works, machinery, and plant’ shall not be mantraps, and not to expose their employees to needless hazard; and in selecting between different machinery and instrumentalities, they must keep themselves reasonably abreast with improved methods, so as to lessen the danger attendant on the service. They are not, however, required to adopt every new invention. Something must be left to enlightened judgment and discretion. It is supposed that in such matters even the skillful and experienced will frequently differ in the choice of instrumentalities ; while neither should be adjudged negligent for not conforming to some other method believed by some to be less perilous. The correct rule is declared in 78 Ala. 494, 503, as follows: ‘A railroad company’s duty to its employeés does not require it to adopt, every new invention or appliance useful in its business,, although it may serve to diminish risks to life, limb, or property incident to its service. It is sufficient fulfullment of duty to adopt such as are in ordinary use, by prudently conducted roads engaged in like business, and surrounded by like circumstances.
See, also, R. & D. Ry. Co. v. Jones, 92 Ala. 218, 9 South. 276; L. & N. Ry. Co. v. Allen, 78 Ala. 494; L. & N. Co. v. Hall, 91 Ala. 112, 8 South. 371, 24 Am. St. Rep.
Another witness said: “The same kind of jigger as this had been used for years. * * * I have never seen a jigger with pins through it. I have never found any necessity of the jigger having any such pins.”
As heretofore stated, the plaintiff offered no proof to show any improved jigger had ever been devised, patented, or placed on the market, or put in practical use, nor that any jigger had even been tested by the use of a pin; and no proof was offered that a block of wood of greater width could have been used with greater safety and practicability. It is therefore not shoAvn that the jigger and block used on this occassion were not reasonably safe and reasonably adapted to the purposes for which they Avere used. The evidence bearing upon this question has been carefully considered and Ave have reached the conclusion that the plaintiff failed to make out a case for submission to the jury under the second count, and that there was error in the refusal of the court to give the peremptory charge for the defendant. We are mindful that some of the above-cited cases (L. & N. Co. v. Propst, and L. & N. Co. v. Allen) received some comment by this court in the recent case of Caldwell-Watson Co. v. Watson 183 Ala. 326, 62 South. 859; but the court was there, in this respect, largely speaking to the proposition that in every case
Count 3 charges negligence to the superintendent as follows: “Said negligence consisted in ordering the men under him to move a set of car trucks with a jigger not sufficient to hold such trucks.”
We construe this language as meaning to charge insufficiency to the jigger either as to its strength or size. If this be the proper construction, it is clear that the defendant was also entitled to the affirmative charge as to this count, as the evidence is without dispute that the jigger was strong enough and of sufficient size to hold the car trucks, and that, in fact, a number of such trucks had been moved that morning before the plaintiffs injury, as well' as afterwards. The positive evidence as to the strength and sufficiency of the jigger is without any dispute whatever. One witness testified: “This was the first time I had ever seen a jigger slip, with all the experience I had Avith using trucks. The trucks were not too .heavy for the jigger. We had been using them all that morning, and continued to use them after the accident. The jigger did not break down with trucks. It held them up all right.”
No better explanation of the accident seems to be found in the record than that given by the witness Mat
No negligence charged against the superintendent was shown; and, the alleged defect in the instrument used being unsupported by any tendency of the evidence, there certainly being none that it arose from or had not been discovered or remedied owing to the negligence of the master or employer, or some one in his service intrusted with the duty of seeing that the same was in proper condition, the accident, if it happened as above stated, was merely one of those occurences incident to the employment, and not traceable to any prescribed negligence. In this view of the case it is deemed unnecessary to consider any other question presented.
The judgment of the court below is reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.