45 A. 577 | R.I. | 1900
We think the first count in the plaintiff's declaration is demurrable in that it does not allege in what *573
respect the lifting, passing, and unloading of the bricks from the wagon was a perilous or dangerous employment for the plaintiff's infant son; and, also, in that it does not allege how or by what particular cause he was thrown to the ground and run over by the wheel of the wagon. The mere allegation that the defendant negligently and wrongfully employed the boy to unload the bricks, that said employment was dangerous for a person of his extreme youth, and that he was injured while in the performance of the work, does not inform the defendant of the cause of the accident with that degree of certainty to which he is entitled under the settled rules of pleading, namely, with that degree of certainty of which the nature of the thing pleaded reasonably admits. Wilson v. Ry. Co.,
We think the second count is also demurrable for the same reasons as the first, and also for the further reason that while it sets out that the fellow-servants of the plaintiff's son were wholly incompetent to perform the duties devolved upon them by the defendant by reason of their extreme youth, which incompetency was fully known by the defendant, and that "by reason of the careless and negligent conduct of the defendant by said servants the plaintiff's infant son was thrown with great force and violence to the ground and the wheel of the carriage and wagon passed over his body," etc., it fails to allege the act or acts of said fellow-servants which constituted the negligence complained of. In other words, it does not appear wherein the fellow-servants of plaintiff's son were negligent, or how their negligence contributed to the happening of the accident in question. *574
Demurrer sustained, and case remitted to the Common Pleas Division for further proceedings.