Central of Georgia Ry. Co. v. Carlock
This text of 72 So. 261 (Central of Georgia Ry. Co. v. Carlock) 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.
Opinion
“The plaintiff claims of the defendants $25,000, damages, for that, heretofore, to-wit, on the 15th day of April, 1913, defendant’s servant or agent, acting within the line and scope of his authority as such, wrongfully arrested and imprisoned plaintiff for a long time, viz., for one day, and, as a proximate consequence thereof, plaintiff suffered the injuries and damages set out in the first count of the complaint.”
As readily appears, this count would fix liability, for the damnifying consequences of the wrong charged, under the doctrine of respondeat superior. In order to avail of this doctrine, it was imperative that the pleader make certain, at least to a common intent, in whose services, of the two defendants, the derelict agent or servant was when he committed the wrong for [661]*661which recovery was sought. The count, as phrased, left entirely uncertain in whose service, of the two defendants, the derelict agent or servant was engaged when the wrong alleged was inflicted upon the plaintiff. In this state of the averments of the count, no other conclusion is possible under our authorities than that the count failed to state a cause of action; and, being so completely ineffectual, no valid, judgment could be predicated of the count. — Osborne v. Cooper, 113 Ala. 405, 21 South. 320, 59 Am. St. Rep. 117; L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Duncan & Orr, 137 Ala. 446, 453, 455, 34 South. 988, and decisions therein cited. The fact that the latter decision,' and others in its line, involved alternatives does not invite a conclusion that would render them inapplicable to the count under consideration. In those cases, the pleader had sought to at least declare, alternatively, upon theories of responsibility; whereas, in the count here in question, the pleader léft the essential matter of definite ascription of the agent’s authority in the premises wholly at large between two defendants. A judgment by default coiild not have been validly rendered on the count; for the court could not have known to which of the two defendants- the derelict agent’s wrong was ascribed by the pleading or was attributable as the basis for liability, under the doctrine of respondeat superior. There is nothing on the face of the count to justify this court in assuming that there was mere clerical error in the use of the singular, instead of the plural, possessive of the word “defendant” in describing and designating the principal or master of the agent or servant to whose conduct the liability was ascribed.
From the evidence, and inferences therefrom, in the bill of exceptions, it is quite clear that the issues whether'plaintiff was wrongfully arrested and imprisoned on the occasion in question, and whether Jones, as agent or servant of the railway company, effected the wrongful arrest and imprisonment or participated therein were due to be submitted to the jury for decision.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
72 So. 261, 196 Ala. 659, 1916 Ala. LEXIS 504, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-of-georgia-ry-co-v-carlock-ala-1916.