Choctaw Coal & Mining Co. v. Dodd

79 So. 54, 201 Ala. 622, 1918 Ala. LEXIS 171
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 9, 1918
Docket6 Div. 600.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 79 So. 54 (Choctaw Coal & Mining Co. v. Dodd) 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
Choctaw Coal & Mining Co. v. Dodd, 79 So. 54, 201 Ala. 622, 1918 Ala. LEXIS 171 (Ala. 1918).

Opinion

THOMAS, J.

The suit is for damages for personal injuries caused by falling rock from the roof of an entry to defendant’s mine.

Counts 2 and 5, under subdivision 1 of the Employers’ Liability Act (Code 1907, § 3910), charged a defect in said roof, and the failure to sufficiently secure the roof against falling.

Under subdivision 2 of the act count 3 charged that on the 10th day of September, 1915, defendant was engaged in the business of mining coal in Walker county, Ala., and plaintiff was an employé of defendant engaged in the discharge of his duty as such, and that, while so employed, a large rock in the roof of an entry in the mine operated by defendant fell, and carried down an electric wire used in the business of the defendant in said entry, whereby said wire was violently thrown against the body of plaintiff, throwing him to the bottom of said entry and causing the personal injuries specifically enumerated; and it further averred that plaintiff’s injuries were caused by reason of the negligence of one Walter Hines, who was in the service or employment of the defendant, and who had superintendence intrusted to him, whilst in the exercise of such superintendence,' in this, the said Walter Hines negligently ordered, directed, or placed plaintiff in said entry at said place in dangerous proximity to said rock which fell and caused his injuries specified.

[1] Demurrer was sustained to plea 3 as an answer to either count. The assignment of error challenging this ruling as to plea 3 is not well founded, for the reason that the plea failed to aver that an examination of the roof of the mine at the place of the injury would have disclosed the defect, as well as the danger of going to work at the place in question. Henderson v. T. C., I. & R. R. Co., 190 Ala. 126, 128, 67 South. 414; Mascott Coal Co. v. Garrett, Adm’r, 156 Ala. 290, 297, 47 South. 149; Southern Railway Co. v. McGowan, 149 Ala. 440, 452, 43 South. 378.

[2] There was no error in sustaining demurrer to plea 11 as an answer to count 3. It was no more than a denial of the superintendence of Walter Hines, averred in that count, and a denial that the said Hines negligently ordered, directed, or placed plaintiff in said entry at said place in dangerous proximity to said rock which fell and caused plaintiff’s specified injuries. Maddox v. Chilton Warehouse & Mfg. Co., 171 Ala. 216, 221, 224, 55 South. 93; Warrior Coal Co. v. Thompson, 193 Ala. 639, 646, 69 South. 76. Moreover, the defense of .that plea was also available under plea 16.

[3] Demurrer to plea 14 as an answer to count 3 was properly sustained. The plea does not aver that it was plaintiff’s initial duty to remedy the defect, or that in compliance with the master’s order he undertook that duty, and that because of plaintiff’s default in such regard his injury proximately resulted. Warrior Coal Co. v. Thompson, supra; Maddox v. Chilton Warehouse, etc., Co., supra. If it was not plaintiff’s duty, of his own initiative, to remedy the defect, but only to do so upon the advice and consent of another for the master, then it was the duty of such other, acting for the master and with the master’s authority over plaintiff, to furnish plaintiff the materials, agencies, and facilities needful for the remedying or removal of the dangerous defect without unnecessarily imperiling the plaintiff. This primary duty of the master to the servant carries with it a proper and reasonable exercise of the superior judgment of the master as to the materials and facilities needful, and as to the reasonable safety with which such servant, charged with no duty to remedy the defect, may comply with the master’s orders to remedy the same. With the master’s failure to furnish such needful facilities, the duty assumed by a servant in obeying a superior’s orders with which he must comply “reverts pro tempore to its original hearer” — the master; in other words, the *624 master’s default suspends such servant’s duty to remedy the defect, though he be ordered to do so by the master. The master cannot escape responsibility for his negligent order, or failure of duty, that unnecessarily exposed to peril the servant complying therewith or acting thereon, when it was not such servant’s primary duty to do the thing commanded, and it was not perfectly obvious to the servant that to comply was dangerous. If plea 14 were held to be a sufficient answer to count 3, a superintendent with authority over a servant to order and direct his labors might negligently order such servant to attempt to repair or remedy a defect that it was not his primary duty to do, though the servant have not the necessary knowledge, skill, and ability, or the needful facilities, to carry out the order, and such fact be known to such superintendent at the time; and, attempting to obey, and sustaining injuries asi a proximate result, the servant would be without remedy against the master. Moreover, the plea being construed most strongly against the pleader, the substance thereof was a mere traverse of the count it sought to answer, and was provable under the general issue.

[4, 5] The ruling of the trial court is challenged “in allowing plaintiff to prove by the witness Benson that he had heard it talked around there for a day or two that this rock was bad.” Tr. Pl. 39. No such objection to evidence is found at the page of the record indicated. It may be that this assignment of error does not sufficiently identify the ruling sought to be challenged. Carney v. M. C. Kiser Co., 76 South. 853; 1 Crews & Green v. Parker, 192 Ala. 383; 387, 68 South. 287; Woodruff v. Smith, 127 Ala. 65, 28 South. 736; H. B. Claflin Co. v. Rodenberg, 101 Ala. 213, 13 South. 272. However, it appears that one Benson testified of the condition of the roof of the mine entry as it was at the time of plaintiff’s injury. He said, “I hadn’t paid that particular rock that fell any particular attention, only I had heard it talked of as being bad.” This testimony was admitted without objection or motion to exclude. The witness was then asked by plaintiff’s counsel, “For how long a time?” to which question he replied, “They had been talking it for a day or two around there.” At this stage of the examination the defendant objected to the latter question on the ground that it called for irrelevant, incompetent, illegal, and hearsay testimony. The court overruled the objection, and the defendant moved to exclude said answer on the ground assigned to the question. Without evidence to show what witness meant by “they had been talking,” whether the plaintiff, or the defendant’s agent in charge of, and exercising supervision over, the plaintiff, at the time of the injury, or third persons, had been speaking of the condition of the particular rock, all of said evidence should have been excluded on proper objection and motion. However, the fact remains that the original statement of the witness that the particular rock had been spoken of as being bad was admitted in evidence without objection, without motion addressed to the court to exclude the same. In this state of the record, we do not see that prejudicial error was committed by limiting the evidence, “They had been saying that the rock was bad,” in time to a day or two before the injury, and to the locus In quo.

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Bluebook (online)
79 So. 54, 201 Ala. 622, 1918 Ala. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/choctaw-coal-mining-co-v-dodd-ala-1918.