Birmingham Railway & Electric Co. v. Baylor

101 Ala. 488
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 101 Ala. 488 (Birmingham Railway & Electric Co. v. Baylor) 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
Birmingham Railway & Electric Co. v. Baylor, 101 Ala. 488 (Ala. 1893).

Opinion

COLEMAN, J.

The plaintiff Baylor, a minor, sues by his next friend under the Employer’s Liability Act, section 2590 of the Code, to recover damages for injuries sustained while in the employment of defendant as fireman. As the case must be reversed for causes hereafter considered, we deem it proper to consider the sufficiency of the complaint, lest our failure to do so, be construed as an admission that the complaint is free from error. It is proper to add, in justice to the trial court, that the defendant did not demur to the complaint, and trial was had upon the general issue. It is necessary to clearly understand and keep constantly in view the several causes of action as laid in each count, to test the correctness of the rulings of the court upon questions of evidence and instructions to the jury. We have heretofore declared many of the principles embodied in the Employer’s Liability Act, and defined rules of pleading to be observed in framing the complaint, and pleas thereto. In the case of Highland Ave. & Belt R. R. Co. v. Dusenberry, 94 Ala. 413, 419, 10 So. Rep. 274, it was declared that, “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, is demurrable. * * * Inextricable confusion of issues would result from the blending in one count of a number of distinct breaches of duty as independent grounds of recovery, to be chosen from and relied upon at the election of the plaintiff. Perspicuity and certainty in his pleadings are not exacted of the plaintiff if he is permitted to put forward in one count several independent causes of action, stated in such- ambiguous terms as to leave the defendant wholly in doubt as to what alleged breach of duty is really made the ground of the charge of liability.” These rules were declared as applicable to the complaint then under consideration, an examination of which showed that several causes of action and distinct breaches of duty, arising under separate subdivisions of [493]*493section 2590, were united and blended in one count, and in some instances averred in the alternative. The rule declared in the Dusenberry Case in regard to the pleadings was recognized in the case of Kansas City, M. & B. R. R. Co. v. Burton, 97 Ala. 240, 12 So. Rep. 90. In the case of L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Mothershed, 97 Ala. 261, 12 So. Rep. 714, referring to the Dusenberry Case, supra, we said : “It was not held, that when several causes of action averred and relied on for recovery arose under the same subdivision of section 2590 of the Code were stated separately, but not disjunctively, and each averment contained a substantive cause of action such a count was demurrable. A count of this character fully informs the defendant that each substantive averment is relied upon, and he may prepare his defense accordingly. Proof of either will authorize a recovery. The distinction must be kept in mind, where a single count contains several distinct, independent averments each presenting a substantive cause of action, and a count containing several averments all of which combined together make up the one cause of action averred. As to the former, proof of either will authorize a recovery, whereas in the latter it is necessary to prove each of the averments, in order to sustain the cause of action as laid.” Mere redundancy will not vitiate a complaint. The redundant portion may be stricken out, or rejected as surplusage. Let us apply these principles to the several counts of the complaint, and also examine the ruling of the co.urt upon the several instructions refused, with reference to the evidence as applicable to the several counts. The negligence charged in the first count is “of persons in the employment of the defendant who had charge of the switch * * * in leaving said switch open” &c. The cause of action here averred is that given by subdivision 5 of section 2590. The question arises, as to who was in charge of the switch, and what is meant by “charge or control of a switch?”

The defendant introduced evidence as follows : “Mr. Aldrich had charge of looking after the switches and keeping them in order ; he was the séction boss or road master. Aldrich was the man that looked after the. switches. The sections were seven or eight miles.” Turning to Aldrich’s testimony, and he states that he was section foreman, that he went his rounds the morn[494]*494ing of the day on which plaintiff was injured at night. “I did not have occasion to pass there any more during the day ; I had no notice of or reason to think that the lock had been taken away up to the time that Baylor was hurt.” "We do not think the section foreman was a person in charge of the switch in such sort that it was his "duty to attend to and watch the switch and see that it was properly closed or opened. His duty was rather that of a superintendent under subdivision 2, and he was required to superintend and see that the ways, works, machinery and plant, so far as these terms embraced his duties, were kept in order; and if it could be said that he was in charge of the switch in any sense, it would be for this purpose, and not for the purpose of-attending to the closing or opening of the switch. See Bwrton’s Case, supra. No special person was put in charge of the switch, and yet we are satisfied that, under the evidence, there were persons in charge of the switch, within the meaning of the statute.

The evidence for the defendant is that the switch was provided with a suitable lock, and that the section foreman, conductor and engineer, each were provided with a key to this lock. If the foreman, Aldrich, was not charged with the duty of attending to the opening and fastening of the switch, and no one was specially appointed to this duty, and the spur track, connected to the main line by this switch, was in constant use in order that the trains might pass each other, and the en-engineers and conductors were provided with keys for this purpose, there is no other conclusion open, but such persons, pro h.ac vice, were in charge of the switch. The evidence shows that William Dill, an engineer in charge of an engine, used the spur track about thirty minutes before the accident. True he testifies that he saw that the switch was properly secured (not shown to be locked) before he left it, but the evidence is conclusive, that the next train passing along, and upon which plaintiff was injured, left the main track and went through the switch on the spur track in about thirty minutes afterwards. We think there was sufficient evidence to submit to the jury plaintiff’s demand under the first count of this complaint. There was no error in refusing the 4th, 5th and 6th charges requested by the defendant.

We come now to the second count, and this count brings [495]*495up for consideration the principles of pleading referred to in a former part of this opinion. It is averred in this count that the injury was caused by “the negligence of of persons in the employment of the defendant, who had charge of the switch, * *

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Bluebook (online)
101 Ala. 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birmingham-railway-electric-co-v-baylor-ala-1893.