55 A. 366 | Md. | 1903
This appeal is taken from a ruling of the Superior Court of Baltimore City sustaining a demurrer to a declaration, the substance of which is as follows: "For that the defendant corporation at the time of the commission of the wrong and injury hereinafter mentioned, was operating a stone quarry in the city of Baltimore, and Edward Jeter, the husband and father of the equitable plaintiffs was employed by it as a stone cutter. And it was the duty of the defendant corporation to provide the said Jeter with a reasonably safe and proper place in which to work, and with reasonably safe and proper tools with which to work, and to employ reasonably competent co-employees, and to promulgate rules for their government, and to refrain *698 from exposing the said Jeter to unnecessary risk and danger while at work. And the plaintiff in fact says that on the day and date mentioned, the said Jeter was directed by one of the employees of said corporation, then and there in command of said quarry, and having authority over him, to extract a charge of blastingpowder theretofore placed in a hole drilled in a rock in saidquarry, for which work the said Jeter was not skilled, fitted, oremployed, and of the danger of which he was ignorant andunwarned, and in the execution of which he was killed. And the plaintiff further says that the death of the said Jeter was directly due to the negligence of the defendant corporation in discharge of its aforesaid duties toward him, to wit, the duties to provide him with a reasonably safe and proper place in which to work, and with reasonably safe and proper tools with which to work, and to employ competent co-employees, and to promulgate rules for their government, and to refrain from exposing him to unnecessary risk and danger whilst at work, and that the said Jeter used due care, but the defendant corporation did not use due care. And by the reason of the killing of said Jeter, the equitable plaintiffs were deprived of his support; and the plaintiff claims $5,000 damages." The plaintiff declining to amend the declaration after the ruling on the demurrer, judgment for costs was entered for defendant.
Mr. Poe, in section 562 of his work on Pleading, speaking of the degree of precision required in pleading, says: "The declaration should always describe the contract for the breach of which the suit is instituted, or the tort for which redress is sought, with such reasonable degree of certainty as will give fair notice to the defendant of the character of the claim or demand made against him, so as to enable him to prepare for his defense;" and in Gent v. Cole,
Such a lumping aggregation of general charges of neglect of duty, without a single specification upon which to prepare a defense cannot be regarded as gratifying the fundamental principles of pleading which are still recognized and enforced *700
in our simplified system, as we have recently had occasion to observe in Edger v. Burke, reported in
In Waldhier v. Hannibal, c., R. Co., 71 Mo. 514, a petition by an employee stating, without any specific facts, that plaintiff was injured in consequence of the negligence of a railroad company in using defective machinery, and in running and managing its railroad and cars, was held fatally defective; the Court saying: "We may well ask what is the cause of action?" So in Smead v. Lake Shore Railway,
That these principles of the common law, as applicable to the case before us, have been retained in our own code system will be seen upon reference to Art.
The only statement of any specific facts in this declaration is found in that part which is hereinbefore transcribed in italics. This italicised passage intervenes between those parts of the declaration which we have already considered and is in nowise aided by them. Its sufficiency therefore may be considered as if the preceding and succeeding parts of the declaration, so far as they relate to the cause of death, had been wholly *701 omitted, and when analyzed it will be found scarcely less general and vague.
It does not state what was the nature of the danger, against which he should have been warned. It does not charge that it was unknown to the servant, or not open and obvious to ordinary observation, and therefore one against which it was the master's duty to warn the servant. There is no averment that his death was caused by his want of skill for the work he was directed to perform, or by the failure to warn him of the danger. There is in fact no statement whatever of any cause of his death, but a mere averment that he was killed in the execution of the work.
If the danger was open and obvious, the servant, being an intelligent adult, is held to have assumed the risk, the rule not requiring instruction and warning as to dangers which can be seen by common observation. 2 Bailey's Personal Injuries Relating toMaster and Servant, sec. 2730. He may have been unskilled and unfitted for this work, and yet the accident may have happened from a cause which would have been equally fatal to the most skilled and experienced workman, or from one against which any instructions or warning would have been futile to protect him. Every fact alleged in the language we are now considering may be true, and yet there might be no right of action against the defendant. There was no right of action unless the death was directly due to some tortious act of the defendant, and upon demurrer, both some such specific act, and its causal collection with the injury complained of, must clearly appear in the declaration.
But another fatal objection to the declaration is that it shows the alleged negligence, even if the cause of the death, was the negligence of a fellow servant. It expressly states that he was ordered to do this work by "one of the employees of the corporation," though it adds that he "was in command of the quarry, and had authority over him." But it is said in 2Bailey's Personal Injuries, sec. 2106, that "it makes no difference that the offending servant is a servant of superior authority, unless such superior servant rises to the grade ofalter ego of the principal. *702
And in Yates v. McCullough Iron Company,
The appellant relies in this aspect of the case upon the case of the East Brooklyn Box Co. v. Nudling, decided in this Court at the last January term,
Here however the averment is clear and emphatic that the negligence complained of was that of a fellow servant.
Judgment affirmed with costs to the appellee above and below.
(Decided June 30th, 1903.) *703