66 So. 517 | Ala. | 1914
The plaintiff, Wade C. Welch, was a merchant in the city of Birmingham. The store in which he kept his goods caught fire, and a small hole was burned in the roof. There was evidence tending to show that, when the fire department put the fire out, water was poured into the building. Some of the evidence tended to show that this water materially injured the goods of the plaintiff, while there was other evidence tending to show that no material injury was thereby caused to the plaintiff’s goods.
2. The defendant, the Evans Construction Company, was employed to repair the hole which the above fire had made in the roof. There was evidence tending to show that, in making the repairs, the construction company increased the size of the hole in the roof, and that after this was done, the roof was one night left unprotected by the construction company, that it rained heavily that night, that the rainwater poured in through the hole onto the plaintiff’s goods, and that thereby the plaintiff’s goods were materially injured. There was evidence in the case from which the jury had the right to infer that the weather was in an unsettled condition when the above roof was undergoing
3. In one of its aspects negligence may be said to consist in a failure to observe reasonable business precautions to prevent injury to the person or property of another. A negligent farmer might, in an unsettled spell of weather, leave his hay unprotected in the fields, while at the same time a reasonably prudent farmer might, to prevent injury from rain, gather up his hay and place it in stacks or in his barn. The question in cases like the present always is: What, under the same circumstances, would a reasonably prudent man, in the management of his own business, and reasonably skilled in that business, have naturally and probably ■done? What such a man, under like circumstances, would probably have done, determines whether the particular act under inquiry was or was not negligent.
“The rule imposing liability on defendant, although another efficient cause concurs with defendant’s negligence, applies where an accident or act .of God is the concurring cause. And the same is true where the primary cause was an accident for which defendant was not liable, if the injury would not have resulted but for his negligence, or where by the exercise of ordinary care the result might have been essentially mitigated.” • — -29 Cyc. 504, and authorities there cited.
The above rule is one which common sense has deduced from human experience, and under that rule as applied to all the evidence and the pleadings in this
4. We have not engaged in a discussion of the questions presented by the pleadings. The counts remaining in the complaint and the pleas left in the record are sufficient for all purposes of the next trial. The court committed no error, under the evidence in this case, in charging the jury that, if the plaintiff is entitled to recover, he is not entitled to “loss of profits as claimed in each count of the complaint,” but that, if he is entitled to recover, his damages are “the difference in the value of the goods before and after the injury.”'—Southern Railway Co. v. Colemwn, 153 Ala. 266, 44 South. 837; Krebs v. Brown, 108 Ala. 508, 18 South. 659, 54 Am. St. Rep. 188; Young v. Cureton, 87 Ala. 727, 6 South. 352.
In this connection it may not be inappropriate to call attention to the fact that where there is, in an action of tort, a breach of duty shown, and the amount of the injury resulting from it is not shown, nominal damages are proper.—Bagby, Use, etc., v. Harris, 9 Ala. 173; 2 Mayf. Dig. p. 1030.
5. We have above discussed all of the questions presented by the record which appear of importance. In this record there appear the reversible errors which we have above pointed out and because of those errors
Reversed and remanded.