89 So. 293 | Ala. | 1921
The only count submitted to the jury was the fourth. Aside from its formal parts and the description of plaintiff's (appellee's) injuries, it reads:
"* * * The plaintiff was employed by the defendant and was injured while in the discharge of his duties as an employee of the defendant, by falling from or through a scaffold, upon which this plaintiff was working as a riveter, and while he was so working in the service or employment of the defendant as such riveter. Plaintiff further avers that his injuries were proximately caused by the negligence of one, R. H. Bumgardner, who was in the service or employment of the defendant, and who had superintendence intrusted to him, and whilst in the exercise of such superintendence, the said Bumgardner negligently permitted and suffered the said scaffold to be and remain in an unsafe condition, as constructed of defective and unfit material, so that it was dangerous and unfit for the purpose for which it was being used, as a scaffold."
The count was designed to state a cause of action under the second subdivision *143
of our liability act (Code, § 3910). It is a "superintendence" count only; and the sufficiency of its averments is, on demurrer, alone determinable by reference to the exactions of that subdivision. The superintendence attributed to Bumgardner through the averments of this count contemplated his supervision of this scaffold with respect to its safety — a duty that is alleged to have been breached by him in the particulars, or with the results, averred, in proximate consequence of which plaintiff was injured. That such a superintendency may be constituted is not a matter of doubt. It is not different in principle from the supervision recognized in K. C., M. B. R. R. Co. v. Burton,
Under the second subdivision the capacity of a superintendent to be or become negligent is not limited to his positive acts. He may omit the discharge of a duty and thereby be or become negligent; and when he does so he is negligent "while in the exercise of his superintendence." A superintendent's duty defines the bases and limits of his possible neglect; and, if his duty be anticipatory, involving inspection of care that dangers consequent may be avoided of introduction or discovered, and their menace averted, and he omits to discharge such duties, the fault and proximately resulting injury is attributable, under subdivision 2 of section 3910, to his superintendence. The argument for appellant is predicated of the mistaken view that count 4 is an unallowable blending of causes of action under subdivisions 1 and 2 of section 3910, or that the substance of the right of action sought to be asserted in this count is referable alone to subdivision 1 of section 3910. The only reasonable construction of the count is that accorded it above — that it was designed, and in fact sufficiently states a cause of action under subdivision 2 of section 3910. None of the decisions of this court cited for appellant conclude against the views we have expressed. The Fitzgerald Case,
The count's averments sufficiently refer the scaffold causing plaintiff's injury to the superintendence of Bumgardner, and characterize as negligent his described duty as well as fault with respect thereto. Whether the performance by Bumgardner of the duty alleged would have resulted in Bumgardner's discovery of the unsafety of this scaffold was a matter not required to be averred in the count. There was no error in overruling the demurrer to count 4.
In so far as the averments of count 4 were concerned, there was evidence tending to support its material allegations. The fact of plaintiff's injury was not in dispute. His relation at the time to the master (defendant) was likewise not controverted. The means of his injury was a faulty piece of timber on which the plank floor of the scaffold rested. The faulty timber had a "knot hole" in it, extending nearly through it and so weakening the strength of the piece that it fell under plaintiff's weight. According to phases of the evidence this "knot hole," the fault in the timber, had, before its use in this temporary scaffold, become so covered with cement as to obscure the defect from ordinary observation. The scaffold was not erected by plaintiff, and he was not aware of the presence of the fault in the timber prior to his injury. We will come presently to questions arising out of his asserted negligence in not inspecting the scaffold before mounting it. *144
The evidence tended to show that Bumgardner was a "superintendent," a "supervisor," and "inspector" of "safety" about and over defendant's (appellant's) plant. With respect to Bumgardner's duties, the witness Alexander testified:
"Mr. Bumgardner was safety inspector for the company at the time. His duties, as I understood them, was to inspect all over the plant for safety and anything which seemed unsafe, and to see that it was made safe. He has nothing to do with the men, no superintendence over them. If he saw men working in a dangerous place, he would notify the foreman and the foreman would have them taken off."
The witness McCurry testified in reference to Bumgardner's functions, duties, and powers as follows:
"I know Mr. Bumgardner the safety inspector. I saw him around there every day or two. He had charge of the men so far as the safety inspections were concerned. Whatever orders or directions were given by him in reference to safety had to be obeyed by the employees working there."
Other quotations from the evidence would be but cumulative of the effect of this evidence as going to warrant the jury in finding that Bumgardner was a "superintendent," within the purview of subdivision 2 of section 3910; that his duties were anticipatory, preservative and conservative in character; and that his failure or omission to prevent, to discover, or to remedy the condition out of which this danger arose was a breach of his duty as superintendent. It could not be affirmed as a matter of law that he did not breach his duty in the premises, or that had he discharged his duty he would not have detected the dangerous fault in this timber. Indeed, it is not shown, in any degree, in the evidence that Bumgardner undertook at any time the inspection of this scaffold, with a view to determining the safety thereof. Generally, whether one has performed a duty to exercise reasonable care, diligence, and skill under certain circumstances is a question for the jury's decision. Grand Trunk Ry. v. Ives,
In addition to the general issue defendant (appellant) interposed special pleas, setting up, in substance, that it was plaintiff's duty to inspect the scaffold, his breach of this duty, and that he was injured in consequence of his failure to inspect it. Other special pleas also charged plaintiff with contributory negligence because of his failure to observe the following rule:
"Every employee before going upon any scaffold of any description must see for himself that the scaffold and its supports are properly built. Sufficient time at all times will be allowed to each employee to make this examination. He is forbidden to enter upon any scaffold until he has satisfied himself by such personal examination that it is safe."
The court instructed the jury at defendant's request that the rule was reasonable; that it was plaintiff's duty to observe the rule; and that it was plaintiff's duty before going on the scaffold to make a personal examination as to the safety of the scaffold; but the court declined to instruct the jury, through requests of defendant, that as a matter of law plaintiff violated the rule, or that he was concluded as a matter of law by his failure to inspect, to personally examine, the scaffold to ascertain its safety.
The evidence was in conflict as to whose duty it was, the iron workers or the carpenters — the plaintiff being of the former class — to build these scaffolds. It is quite clear that the plaintiff did not aid in its erection, and also that he did not in fact know of the faulty timber supporting its flooring. The rule is prohibitory in terms and effect. It was designed to assure the safety of employees using scaffolds like this, exacting a personal examination by an employee who intended to use the scaffold before he should go upon it. This was the basic view of the instruction given on this phase of the case; and in so advising the jury the court appears to have soundly concluded. But from the premise thus afforded it could not be further declared as a matter of law either that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in going upon the scaffold without first giving it a personal examination that operated or would necessarily operate to bar his recovery under count 4, even if it is accepted that he knew of the rule's requirements at the time.
The rule quoted above does not in terms undertake to define the measure or the extent of the personal examination required. It cannot be interpreted as imposing upon the employee the duty of assuring his own safety. Dresser's Employers' Liability, pp. 146-149, citing earlier pertinent decisions of this court. Aside from the general language of the rule there was evidence, particularly that of the witness Alexander (cross-examination), that tended to invite the conclusion that the inspection contemplated by the rule and regarded in practice in the plant was a general overlooking *145 of the scaffold structure, not a "minute" examination of the elements that went to make up the scaffold. This evidence served, in a view, to explain the rule, not to contradict it. If this was the rule's design, then it was open to the jury to find that plaintiff's failure to inspect or to examine did not involve a breach of the rule, since the fault in the supporting timber was obscured by the coating of set concrete, and it could not be affirmed as a legal result that a general, not minute, overlooking of the structure would have discovered the hidden imperfection that made the scaffold dangerous. These considerations, if not others, justified the court in refusing special charges 7, 9, 10, 12, and 16. On the whole case the material issues were due to be submitted to the jury; and this course the court observed.
The court properly excluded, on defendant's objection, the proffered evidence that plaintiff had a family. L. N. R. R. Co. v. Binion,
No error appearing; the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SOMERVILLE and THOMAS, JJ., concur.