B'ham Ry. L. & P. Co. v. Nicholas

61 So. 361, 181 Ala. 491, 1913 Ala. LEXIS 132
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 13, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 61 So. 361 (B'ham Ry. L. & P. Co. v. Nicholas) 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
B'ham Ry. L. & P. Co. v. Nicholas, 61 So. 361, 181 Ala. 491, 1913 Ala. LEXIS 132 (Ala. 1913).

Opinion

MAYFIELD, J.

Appellee sued appellant to recover damages for personal injuries. The wrongful act alleged is that appellant’s motorman ran a car against or so near to plaintiff that she was knocked, or thereby caused to fall, into a ditch or culvert. In two counts the Avrong was alleged to be due to simple negligence, and in the other it is denominated Avantonness.

The place of the injury — that is, the locus in quo— is alleged to be at or near East Brighton station, on defendant’s car line, at or near the défendant’s car line, at a point Avhere a public street or thoroughfare crossed the same. In one count (count 4) it is alleged that plaintiff was at this point for the purpose of taking passage on one of defendant’s cars. In the other counts it is not alleged for what purpose plaintiff Avas at this point. In no count is it alleged that plaintiff was on the track or in dangerous proximity thereto, except infercntially, according to an alternative .that the car struck her. According to the other alternative, she may have been at safe distance from the track, but, on account of fright was caused to fall into the ditch or culvert. In none of the counts is it made certain whether plaintiff was walking along or near to the defendant’s [498]*498car track, or whether she was crossing it, or whether she was traveling along the public street or thoroughfare, or whether she was merely crossing such street or thoroughfare, or whether she was standing still, or was loitering on or at the crossing of the street car track and the street or thoroughfare. It is not made to appear whether the street car track is laid along so as to form a part of the street or thoroughfare, or whether it merely crosses the street or thoroughfare. While it is alleged that there is .a crossing of the street car track and the street, it is not alleged whether the crossing is at grade, or above or below grade. In other words, it is left wholly to conjecture whether the plaintiff Avas a trespasser on or near the defendant’s track at the time of the injury. The allegations to show this fact are extremely indefinite and uncertain. Some of the alternative allegations, standing alone, clearly show that she Avas a trespasser at the time of the injury, while others leave it in doubt whether she was a trespasser or was rightfully at the place where she was injured. — Mr. Gould, Pleading, § 51, p. 80, says: “An important requisite in all pleading is certainty. This requisite implies that the matter pleaded must be clearly and distinctly stated, so that it may be fully understood by the adverse party, the counsel, the jury, and the judges, and especially (as regards the declaration) that the defendant may be enabled to plead the judgment, which may be rendered in the cause, in bar of any subsequent action for the same cause; for if a vague or partial description of the matter in controversy, in a given case, were allowed, and in a subsequent suit of the same thing the declaration should contain a full and precise description of it, the cause of action, though actually the same in both cases, would not appear from a comparison of the two records to be so.”

[499]*499The object and purpose of good pleading is to disclose, and not to conceal, the real issue to be tried. The rules of pleading are to be tested, as well as dictated, by good sense and sound logic. The science of pleading is only a means for obtaining the ends of justice. Attempts to evade or conceal the real issue, or attempts to stifle justice in the webs of form, each merits no more countenance than the underlying rules of law compel the court to accord. It would be a deplorable condition of the law of pleading if the plaintiff could file a count or a complaint good against all proper or appropriate grounds of demurrer, yet leaving it impossible for the defendant or the court to know of what particular wrong or injury the plaintiff complains. While a plaintiff, under our system of pleading; may join two oi* more causes of action in several separate counts, he cannot so join them in one count. A plaintiff is not allowed, against an appropriate demurrer, in a single count, to allege in a doubtful and uncertain manner two or more distinct and incongruous causes of action, in order to hit some possible cause of action that he may be able to prove on the trial. The defendant has the right to be informed of the particular cause of action for which he is sought to be held liable in each count.

At common law alternative averments were not allowed in civil or criminal cases, and some courts held that the ex-ror was not cured by a verdict. But a different rule has long prevailed in this state; in fact, we have a statute expressly allowing certaixx alternative averments ixx ixxdictments. — Or. Code, §§ 7149-7152. A similar rule of pleadixxg in civil cases has beexx allowed, when each alternative, of itself, states a good cause of action or groxxnd of defense; but the rxxle has never been extended in this state so as to allow the statement of material allegations ixx the alternative, which are in[500]*500consistent each with the other — that is, to allow one alternative to state one cause of action, and the other to state an entirely different cause of action. In Dusenberry’s Case, 94 Ala. 418, 419, 10 South. 274, 276, it is said: “Alternative averments of matters of substance are destructive of all certainty in the formation of definite issues for trial. The prime object of the successive steps in pleading under our system is to evolve such issues so that they may be presented pointedly and distinctly. * * * Under our system, ‘all pleadings must be as brief as is consistent with perspicuity, and the presentation of the facts, or matter to be put in issue, in an intelligible form; no objection can be allowed for defect of form, if the facts are so presented that a material issue in law or fact can be taken by the adverse party thereon.’ — Code, § 2664. It cannot be said of a complaint that it is perspicuous, or that it presents the facts in an intelligible form, so that a material issue may be taken thereon by the defendant, unless it contains a clear and distinct statement of the facts which constitute the cause of action, so that they may be understood by the party who is to answer them, by the jury, who are to ascertain the truth of the allegations, and by the court, who is to give judgment. — 1 Chitty on Pleading (16th Am. Ed.) 256. * * * When the plaintiff, in a single count, shifts his right of action from one ground to another, and states several breaches of duty in the alternative, or disjunctively, so that it is impossible to say upon which of several equally substantive averments he relies for the maintenance of his action, then there is such confusion and obscurity as to the ground upon which a recovery is claimed that the defendant is not clearly informed of the matter to be put in issue; and a count so substantially variant and contradictory in its allegations is demurrable. [501]*501Dusenberry’s Gase has been explained, if not qualified, to this extent. In Mothershed’s Case, 97 Ala. 265, 12 South. 718, it is said: “It is argued that under the rule declared in Highland Avenue & Belt R. R. Co. v. Dusenberry, 94 Ala. 413, 10 South. 274, that the complaint and each couut thereof was defective, and that the court erred in overruling the demurrer. There may be some expressions in the Duesnberry Gase which apparently sustain this contention, but regard must be had to the character of the complaint then under consideration.

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Bluebook (online)
61 So. 361, 181 Ala. 491, 1913 Ala. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bham-ry-l-p-co-v-nicholas-ala-1913.