Chesapeake v. Smith

39 S.W. 832, 101 Ky. 104, 1897 Ky. LEXIS 156
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 19, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 39 S.W. 832 (Chesapeake v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chesapeake v. Smith, 39 S.W. 832, 101 Ky. 104, 1897 Ky. LEXIS 156 (Ky. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

JUDGE BURNAM

delivered tee opinion, oe the court.

This case was brought' by appellee to recover damages for the destruction of his barn and contents by fire, alleged to have originated from sparks from a locomotive on the appellant’s railroad, and resulted in a judgment in favor of appellee for the sum of $800. Appellant seeks a reversal for several alleged errors occurring on the trial.

First, appellant plead as a part of its defense in the action that the appellee, Smith, “on the occasion in question was guilty of negligence on his part,-and that said negligence contributed to the injury complained of by him, and that but for such negligence on his part the injury would not have happened.”

The plaintiff moved the court to require the defendant to set out the facts in full and specially on which he relied to support this plea of contributory negligence.

Against the contention of the appellant the court sustained this motion, and, upon his refusal to amend as indicated, this defense was stricken from the pleadings.

The question as to whether defense can be made under a plea of general denial, as in this case, or whether the facts must be specially alleged, is not entirely free from difficulties. In fact, it has been ruled both ways in the United States. Generally it may be said that in those States “where it is incumbent on the defendant to plead contributory negligence specially, and where the defense can not be made un[107]*107der a general denial, the trend of authorities is that a general averment that the plaintiff was guilty of negligence which contributed to the injury, and that he could have avoided all damage by the exercise of proper care, is not'good; the acts and the facts constituting such contributory negligence should be averred.” (See Encycloepedia of Pleading and Practice, volume 5, page 12.)

In the case of the Tennessee Coal Co. v. Herndon (100 Ala., 451), the defendant pleaded contributory negligence in these words: “That the plaintiff’s intestate was himself guilty of negligence which approximately contributed to his alleged injury.” The court said: “A demurrer was sustained to this plea on the ground that the plea did not definitely state in what the contributory negligence consisted, but merely averred contributory negligence generally.”

We have held that under our system of pleadings damage suits consist of but little more than averments of conclusions. Many pleas in form like the one under consideration, have passed this court, but there had been no objection raised against the plea in the trial court, and it would be regarded by us as a plea, in short, by consent.

So in the case of the Phoenix Insurance Company v. Mogg (78 Ala., 301,) the court held: “A plea by defendant which consisted wholly of a conclusion of la,w, is not sufficient,” holding that there should be a succinct statement of the facts relied on as a cause of action.

In the case of Harrison v. the Missouri Railway Company (74 Missouri, 364), after speaking of the duty of defendant' to state the specific facts of the negligence complained of, says: “If necessary to state the particular facts constituting [108]*108negligence before a railroad company can be made liable for the consequences of negligence, it follows necessarily that, when such company seeks exemption from liability to the party complaining on .the ground that the injury complained of was occasioned by the negligence of the other party it should also set up the facts constituting such negligence.”

So it has been held in a number of other cases, but the general practice in this State seems to have been to allow the plea of contributory negligence in the general form in which it is relied on here, and seems to rest largely upon the authority of Mr. Bliss in his work on Code Pleading. In section 211 of that work, in pointing out the distinction in pleading fraud and negligence, he says: “To charge fraud it is not enough to say that the party fraudulently procured, or fraudulently did this or that, or committed a fraud; they are but conclusions of law. The facts constituting the fraud must be stated. On the other hand a general allegation of negligence is allowed. Negligence is. the ultimate fact to be pleaded, and is not a legal conclusion, as the defendant did run and manage one of their cars in such a careless, reckless and negligent manner that death was caused. The law draws the conclusion in both oases, yet we have seen that negligence possesses more the element of fact than fraud. In fraud the facts are misrepresentation and deceit; the term ‘fraud’ is a legal epithet applied to such facts. Fraud is not an act; not a thing in itself any more than murder. We say that one is guilty of fraud because he has done so and so; it is the legal conclusion of these facts. But, on the other hand, negligence is not a term [109]*109given by law to certain conduct but forms part of the act from which the injury has arisen. Specific acts constituting negligence can seldom be directly shown, but is presumed from injuries which ordinarily result only from negligence. For instance, the driver upsets a coach and breaks a passenger’s arm. Careful driving will hardly have such a result; the passenger knows there has been negligence, but he will not be likely to know in what it consisted. So where a locomotive sets fire to fields and buildings along the track, the sufferer can not state in what the negligence consists — whether there is a defect in the furnace or carelessness in the management — some negligence is presumed and it must of necessity be alleged generally. And the same rules apply to an answer which sets up contributory negligence.”

This court took this view in the case of the L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Wolf, (80 Ky., 82). The court, in deciding that case, used this language: “It is contended by counsel that the reply fails to deny the substantive facts constituting contributory negligence, and only traverses the averment of negligence, which is by denying a legal conclusion. The error in this position lies in the assumption that the allegation of negligence is a mere legal conclusion, and that the supposed substantive facts constitute contributory negligence, neither of which is true. The absence of care in the performance of an act is not merely the result of such absence, but the absence itself, and it is not, therefore, a mere conclusion of law, and may be pleaded generally” in an answer, the facts having been specifically set out in the petition. And in many [110]*110' other cases which have been decided in this court, the plea of contributory negligence was set out substantially as in the amended answer of defendant, and has been held good. There are many ways in cases such as this, in which landholders may be guilty of such contributory negligence as may defeat recovery for losses sustained. (See Shearman and Redfield on Negligence sections 679 to 682, and Wood on Railways, Minor’s edition, 1575 to 1600.

We are, therefore, of the opinion that the court erred in striking this plea from the amended answer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 S.W. 832, 101 Ky. 104, 1897 Ky. LEXIS 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chesapeake-v-smith-kyctapp-1897.