41 S.C. 394 | S.C. | 1894
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action by the plaintiff, as the administrator of the estate of John Mickle, deceased, suing for the benefit of the parents of the said John Mickle, for damages for the negligent killing of the said intestate, his son, by the defendant corporation, while engaged in constructing a railroad on the line from Columbia to Laurens Court House, in this State. The complaint, among other things, states that the said John Mickle, on December the 13th, 1890, at the time of committing the grievances hereinafter mentioned, was in the employ of the defendant corporation as a laborer upon a certain
VIII. That the plaintiff is the duly appointed and qualified administrator of the goods, chattels, and effects of the said John Mickle, &c.
The action came on to be tried at the Spring Term of the court, and' when the comiflaint was read, the defendant, by their counsel, interposed a verbal demurrer, and moved to dismiss the same upon the ground that “it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action,” the grounds for the motion being that the complaint did not allege the appointment of the plaintiff as administrator of the deceased, and did not allege any negligent act on the part of the defendant, causing the death of the plaintiff’s intestate. The motion was refused, and the defendant corporation appeals to this court upon two exceptions: (1) “Because the court should have held that the complaint having alleged the employment of plaintiff’s intestate to have been in the construction of the railroad referred to in the complaint, it was fatally defective, in that it did not show that the accident which caused the intestate’s death was not one of the risks incident to his employment, and did not allege that the alleged defects in the road-bed, and the alleged overloading of the car, were known to, or ought to have been known to, the defendant. (2) Because the court should have held that the complaint was fatally defective in that it did not allege the appointment of the plaintiff as administrator of the estate of the intestate. Upon the appeal being taken, the further trial of the case was stayed. (The complaint in full should appear iu the report of the case.)
The defendant company gave no notice, either by demurrer, plea in abatement, or special answer, that they desired to question the right of the plaintiff to sue as administrator; and in the absence of any such demurrer or special denial, we think the allegation in the complaint, as to (he character in which plaintiff sues, must be regarded as admitted. As was said by the Chief Justice, in the latest case in our reports in which the point was considered, that of Hankinson v. Charlotte &c. R. R. Co., ante, 16: “There can be no doubt, under the decisions in this State, viz: Banking Co. v. Turner, 8 S. C., 107; Steamship Co. v. Bodgers, 21 Id., 27; Lumber Co. v. Bisley, 25 Id., 309, that the issue of the capacity of plaintiff to sue cannot be raised by a general denial of all the allegations of the complaint, but must be raised, either by demurrer, where the necessary facts appear on the face of the complaint, or by a special denial in the answer; and in the absence of any such demurrer or special denial, the allegation in the complaint as to the character in which plaintiff sues, must be regarded as admitted,” &c.
But it is insisted that the question was made by demurrer. True, by what is called an “oral demurrer at the trial,” to dismiss the complaint, for the reason that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action — -that is to say, too late to make the proper issue by the pleadings. “Where the declaration, in an action by an administrator to recover damages for the death of his intestate, avers that plaintiff was ap
We have lately had occasion to consider the subject somewhat in connection with the case of Walling, the conductor of the materia] train, against the same company, who was killed in the same accident by which the intestate, Mickle, lost his life; and reference is made to that case (ante, 388). As the case must go back to the Circuit Court, we will not, under an oral demurrer, make any ruling upon the subject of the alleged defective road-bed and track, or the knowledge of the parties at the time of the accident, which may be matters of defence in the further progress of the case. See Branch v. Railroad Company, 35 S. C., 405.
The judgment of this court is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed, and the case remanded to that court for such further proceedings as may be considered proper.