Ragland Brick Co. v. Bell

72 So. 380 | Ala. | 1916

SAYRE, J.

(1) Virtually, by instructions given the jury on request of the defendant, the court eliminated all issues save those raised by the second count of the complaint. As for any exceptions taken by the demurrer the sufficiency of the allegation of a common-law cause of action in this count has been more than once sustained. — Gray Eagle Coal Co. v. Lewis, 161 Ala. 415, 49 South. 859; Smith v. Watkins, 172 Ala. 502, 55 South. 611.

In this count the action proceeded on the theory that reasonable care for plaintiff’s safety in his place required that defendant should have provided against his injury by objects falling from the top of the stack while building. Under the evidence, this was a question for the jury, and while we are inclined to think that a conclusion to the contrary would have been perhaps more reasonable, we do not feel authorized to say as matter of clear law that the jury were wrong. Nor are we authorized to disregard that tendency of the testimony offered by plaintiff going to show that at the time and place of his injury he was engaged in the business for which he was employed and to which he had been directed by agents in authority over him. Aside from plaintiff’s testimony, this might have been inferred from the fact that for some days, while in the unquestioned employment of defendant, *16he had been doing just what he was doing when injured. Defendant’s denial, and testimony in support of it was only effective to raise a question for jury decision.

(2) The general charge requested by defendant was refused without error. Charges 4 and 5 were likewise properly refused. The fact that Quillan, defendant’s superintendent, at one time warned plaintiff away from the top of the stack as a place too dangerous for a boy, did not necessarily imply that plaintiff was not engaged in the line and scope of his employment, when, for some days afterwards and until the time of his injury, he was carrying brick to the bottom of the stack. But these charges, construed in the light of the evidence, did carry this implication, and were for that reason correctly refused.

(3) If, as plaintiff’s evidence tended to show, he was at the time where he needed to be in the proper discharge of the business to which he had been assigned, and if in these circumstances defendant failed to take such measures to protect him against falling objects as common prudence should have suggested, the question of proximate connection between this failure and plaintiff’s injury was also a question of fact. To the case thus presented the doctrine of Western Railway v. Mutch, 97 Ala. 194, 11 South. 894, 21 L. R. A. 316, 38 Am. St. Rep. 179, cannot be applied, to the effect that defendant was entitled, as upon a question of law, to defeat plaintiff’s recovery. The case was one for the jury under proper instructions, and we find in the record no sufficient reason for interfering with the result.

Affirmed.

Anderson, C. J., and McClellan and. Gardner, JJ., concur.
midpage