Birmingham Ry., Light & Power Co. v. Buff

77 So. 388, 201 Ala. 94, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 72
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 20, 1917
Docket6 Div. 436.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 77 So. 388 (Birmingham Ry., Light & Power Co. v. Buff) 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 Ry., Light & Power Co. v. Buff, 77 So. 388, 201 Ala. 94, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 72 (Ala. 1917).

Opinions

SAYRE, J.

The complaint in its several counts shows that the building, occupied by defendant and on the fourth floor of which plaintiff's (appellee’s) intestate was engaged in and about the work for which he was employed by defendant, caught on fire whereby plaintiff — we presume the pleader intended to say plaintiff’s intestate — was so burned, asphyxiated, or otherwise injured that he was caused to fall, jump, or be thrown from the building to the street below and to die.

[1] The first count, framed under the common law, declared upon defendant’s negligent failure to furnish intestate with a reasonably safe place in wjiich to do and perform the work for which he was employed. The only objection taken to the count in a manner requiring notice is that a reasonable degree of care in the premises alleged did not exact of defendant the duty of providing against the unforeseen and unusual danger of a fire. The old common-law rule, adopted of course with reference to the buildings of the time, was that where a *95 building was properly constructed, for the use to which the occupant was putting it, and was not peculiarly exposed to fire from the character of the work carried on within it, the occupant was not required by any duty he owed to his employés therein to provide against so remote a contingency as the destruction of the building by fire otherwise than by the ordinary means of stairways, halls, doorways, and windows. Jones v. Granite Mills, 126 Mass. 84, 30 Am. Rep. 661; Pauley v. Steam Gauge & Lantern Co., 131 N. Y. 90, 29 N. E. 999, 15 L. R. A. 194. Pretermitting at this point statement as to how that rule has been affected by the appearance of the modern skyscraper and — 1 apart from the provision of section 7095 of the Code — the alleged necessity for specially constructed fire escapes upon such, buildings, it suffices to say that a degree of care to conserve the safety of its building for employes therein, whatever the character of the building, was required of defendant, and that under our system of pleading the most general allegation of default therein is permissible. The demurrer to the first count of the complaint was properly overruled.

Like considerations lead to the conclusion that the court did well to overrule the causes of demurrer alleged against the second and fourth counts of the complaint, which counts charged negligence under the superintendence clause of the Employers’ Liability Act.

Count 5 of the complaint was evidently framed under section 7095 of the Code, which reads as follows:

“7095. Fire Escapes. — Any owner, proprietor, or manager of any hotel, office building, school building, store, or manufacturing building, which is more than two stories high, now erected, who shall fail for six months after the adoption of this Code to have securely fixed and conveniently arranged so as to be accessible to persons lodging in, working in, or occupying such building, * * * good and sufficient fire escapes or ladders for each story of said building, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor,” etc.

The count alleges that “defendant in the conduct of its business” occupied the building, and “that the said building was an office building, store, or manufacturing plant, and was more than two stories high, and defendant had been in possession of and using said building for more than’ six months immediately preceding and up to the time of said death, and wrongfully failed to have securely fixed and conveniently arranged so as to tie accessible to said intestate, who as such employs of defendant was working in or occupying an upper story of said building at the time of said fire in said building, good and sufficient fire escapes or ladders for the said story of said building on which said intestate was on the occasion aforesaid, and as a proximate consequence of said wrong said intestate’s death was caused.” The effort, we take it, and the parties so consider it in their briefs, was to charge a violation of the statute, and the point of the demurrer is that the count fails to show that defendant was the owner, proprietor, or manager of the building.

[2] The statute, though it operates to provide a remedy for persons injured by a violation of its terms, is highly penal. While its purpose is not to be defeated by a construction too narrow and strict, yet it imposes a duty unknown to the common law, punishes a neglect of that duty criminally, and, it scarcely needs to be said, its condemnation cannot be extended by implication to persons who do not fairly come within its terms. Schott v. Harvey, 105 Pa. 222, 51 Am. Rep. 201. The intention of a penal statute must be found in the language actually used, interpreted according to its fair and otivious meaning. “It is not permitted to the courts, in this class of cases, to attribute inadvertence or oversight to the Legislature when enumerating the classes of persons who are subject to a penal enactment, nor to depart from the settled meaning of words or phrases in order to bring persons not named or distinctly described within the supposed purpose of the statute.” United States v. Harris, 177 U. S. 305, 20 Sup. Ct. 609, 44 L. Ed. 780. The purpose of the statute is to conserve human life, and this it does, not by providing in terms for the compensation of any person injured as a result of a violation of its mandate, but by imposing punishment for its violation; and it may be observed that, except perhaps in the case of hotels, the command of the statute regulates conduct in its relation to the ownership, proprietorship, or managment of buildings, rather than the business carried on therein. The repeated use of the word “building” gives emphasis to this conception of the statute. If the Legislature had intended that tenants', each and every tenant, whether holding the lease of an entire building or a cubby-hole of an office on the seventeenth floor, should be criminally and otherwise responsible for the erection and maintenance of fire escapes, it seems strange that it did not use the term most readily at hand and which would have expressed the idea in all its fullness’ without leaving a doubt behind. Instead, it laid this duty on owners, proprietors, and managers, and the fair and obvious meaning of the language actually used must be observed in every administration of the statute. We do not intend to deny that a tenant may occupy a building in such circumstances as to become the owner, proprietor, or manager within the purview of the statute, but only to affirm that not every tenant or occupant is necessarily an owner, proprietor, or manager, and hence that the count should have alleged that defendant was the owner, proprietor, or manager of the building in question, or facts necessarily showing such to be the case.

[3, 4] On the evidence defendant was entitled to the general charge as to counts 2 *96 and 4. These counts charge, under the second subdivision of the Employers’ Liability Act (Code 1907, § 3910 [2]), that intestate’s death was caused by the negligence of defendant’s superintendent whose name, it is alleged, was unknown to plaintiff. There was no evidence of superintendence or that there was any superintendent. There was no evidence that superintendence of the building was delegated to any one.

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Bluebook (online)
77 So. 388, 201 Ala. 94, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birmingham-ry-light-power-co-v-buff-ala-1917.