Alverson v. Little Cahaba Coal Co.

77 So. 547, 201 Ala. 123, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 83
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1917
Docket2 Div. 619.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 77 So. 547 (Alverson v. Little Cahaba Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alverson v. Little Cahaba Coal Co., 77 So. 547, 201 Ala. 123, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 83 (Ala. 1917).

Opinion

ANDERSON, C. J.

This was an action for the wrongful death of plaintiff’s intestate, an employé of the defendant, resulting from burns received from the explosion of gas in the defendant’s coal mine. The complaint first and last, contained 30 counts, demurrer was sustained to 15, leaving 15, and why it should require this number of counts to show one death or injury and the damnifying cause of same is beyond the understanding of this writer, or why the courts must be shackled and burdened by a system that requires a review of 15 counts to which demurrer was sustained when 15 were left in the complaint is a reflection upon our existing system, but which has existed so long that the fetters cannot well be severed, except by legislative sanction, which has been repeatedly threatened and promised, but without beneficent results. This is intended as no criticism or reflection upon counsel in the case at bar. They have simply availed themselves of a system and custom that can easily lead to absurdities in the administration of justice. Here the plaintiff has 15 ways of stating his case, and we are called upon to review separately and severally the action of the trial court in sustaining demurrer to the other 15 efforts, and, strange as it may seem, we find at least one good count among the number which was not cov *126 ered by those held sufficient by the trial court.

[1, 2] The trial court did not commit reversible error in sustaining the demurrer to counts 1 to 5, inclusive. Neither the caption nor body of the complaint expressly averred that the plaintiff sued as the administrator, and it seems that this rendered the count defective according to what was said in the opinion in the case of Bryant v. So. R. R., 137 Ala. 488, 34 South. 562. The Bryant Case, however, while not expressly overruled, was qualified or explained in the case of Alabama City R. R. v. Heald, 178 Ala. 636, 59 South. 461, to the extent of making counts bad upon demurrer for the failure to charge that the plaintiff sued as administrator to that class where he could maintain an action either in his individual or representative capacity, and not to cases like the present one, where the facts set out showed only a right of action in the personal representatives. If, however, we treat the suit as being by the plaintiff in his representative capacity, each count was defective and insufficient to state a cause of action. They do not set up any relationship between the intestate and the defendant, any right on his part to be in the mine, or the duty owing him by the defendant. They say:

“Plaintiff was in the service or employment of the defendant, in or about said business of the defendant, and while plaintiff was in said mine, in or about said business, as aforesaid, a fire broke out,” etc.

While it avers that the intestate was burned, etc., it does not charge that he was in the mine under the service or employment of the defendant. Moreover, the plaintiff got substantially the benefit of these counts by others to which the demurrers were overruled, but which did not contain the technical defect above mentioned.

[3] The trial court did not err in sustaining the defendant’s demurrer to the sixth count. It charged merely that “a portion of defendant’s mine was defective.” This court had previously gone the limit as to permitting a general averment as to negligence in a complaint and in the description of the defect, but it was held in the case of Tenn. Co. v. Smith, 171 Ala. 251, 55 South. 170, that the rule would not be extended as to generality of defects further than it had gone in the cases of Jackson Co. v. Cunningham, 141 Ala. 213, 37 South. 445, and A. G. S. R. .R. v. Davis, 119 Ala. 572, 24 South. 862. In the Tenn. Co. Case, supra, it was held by the majority that the averment of a defect in an entry of the mine was too indefinite, and the averment here is more general and indefinite than in said case. The case of Pioneer Co. v. Smith, 150 Ala. 356, 43 South. 561, involved a count more specific than the one in question, but whether or not the averment there would have withstood an appropriate demurrer we did not decide, as the question seems not to have been raised in said case, and the opinion nowhere discloses the sufficiency of the complaint in this respect. Moreover, we do not think that the plaintiff’s case was prejudiced by the elimination of count 6, as he got the benefit of the only possible or inferable defects that could have proximately caused the injury to the intestate which subsequently resulted in his death under counts A and E, to which demurrer was overruled.

Count 7, while purporting to proceed upon the superintendence provision of the Employers’ Liability Act, also charges the breach of a nondelegable duty. Moreover, .the negligence of a superintendent was permitted in most general terms in counts I and J, to which the demurrer was overruled, except that they named the superintendent and the seventh count avers that his name is unknown. The alternate averment of said count as to a failure to equip the mine with a proper ventilator or brattice was sufficiently presented in other counts to which demurrers were overruled.

[4] Count 8 is under subdivision 3 of the Employers’ Act (section 3910 of the Code of 1907), and was not subject to the defendant’s demurrers which were erroneously sustained by the trial court. Creola Co. v. Mills, 149 Ala. 474, 42 South. 1019; Bear Creek Mill Co. v. Parker, 134 Ala. 293, 32 South. 700. Notwithstanding demurrers were overruled to 15 counts of this complaint, we fail to find that the plaintiff got the benefit of count 8 under any of them.

[5] Count P was an attempt to state a cause of action under section 50, Acts 1911, p. 518. In the first place, it charges that the defendant intrusted the safety lamp to the intestate kñowing that he was not experienced or competent. The statute provides that such a lamp shall not be intrusted to the person “until he has given satisfactory evidence to the mine foreman that he understands the proper use thereof and danger of tampering with the same.” Construing the count most strongly against the pleader, upon demurrer, the fact that the intestate was not experienced and that the foreman knew that he was not when intrusting him with the lamp did not necessarily violate the statute. He may have been inexperienced, and yet may have furnished satisfactory evidence to the mine foreman that he understood the use of "same. The mine foreman may have undertaken to' instruct him, and he, the intestate, may have demonstrated that he had learned and understood the use of same, although he had had no previous experience in handling siich lamps. If such a lamp could only be intrusted to those of experience, then no new man could be given one or trained or taught to use same. The meaning of this section is that the foreman must ascertain before giving a person such a lamp that he understands the use of same, whether from past experience or from demonstration and answers after the same is fully explained to him.

*127 The other counts to which demurrers were sustained were either faulty or the plaintiff got the full benefit of same under the counts that remained in the complaint, and a discussion of same would merely prolong this opinion without serving any good purpose.

[6]

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Bluebook (online)
77 So. 547, 201 Ala. 123, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alverson-v-little-cahaba-coal-co-ala-1917.