Dallas Manfg. Co. v. Townes

41 So. 988, 148 Ala. 146, 1906 Ala. LEXIS 320
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJuly 6, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 41 So. 988 (Dallas Manfg. Co. v. Townes) 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
Dallas Manfg. Co. v. Townes, 41 So. 988, 148 Ala. 146, 1906 Ala. LEXIS 320 (Ala. 1906).

Opinion

SIMPSON, J.

— This action was brought by the ap-pellee (plaintiff) against the appellant (defendant) to recover damages for an injury received by the plaintiff as an employe of defendant, while said plaintiff was engaged in the duties of his employment working in the cotton mill of defendant. The complaint originally contained four counts, bnt the second count Avas eliminated by demurrer, and the court gave the general charge in favor of the defendant as to the first count. The third count, which is copied in the statement of the case, alleges that injury, which resulted from plaintiff’s hand being “caught between the clothing of the cylinders and the clothing of the slats of the carding machines,” Avas caused by a defect in the condition of the ways, works, etc., in the carding room, in which plaintiff Avas working, was lighted by electric lights, electricity being generated upon the premises, and said electric appliances had become defective in some way unlmoAvn to this plaintiff, that they Avere totally insufficient to give proper light for the servants of defendant to discharge their duties after dark, and at the time of the injury complained of, it was dark and said lights had gone out” — and then makes the statutory averments in regard . to the person in-intrusted, etc. This count alleges that plaintiff was employed by defendant as a helper to aid in placing-new carding machines. The- fourth count alleges that he was employed “as a helper or assistant to those in charge of the setting up and preparing said carding machines,” and that, while so engaged, he “attempted to pass between or around said carding- machines, but stumbled over an obstacle which had been placed in the way between said machines by some person other- than plaintiff,” and thus caught his hand, and that he could not see the obstacle because of the failure of the defendant to furnish proper and sufficient lights in said card-room, and that said lights had been out of order and in [148]*148bad condition for some time, which fact had been made known. to defendant or to its agents, and entrusted with the supervision of its light machinery, and, although the defective condition of said lights was known to plaintiff, the defendant, through its agents,' had been engaged in attempting to remedy said defect, and representing to plaintiff and its employes that said defects had been remedied.

It is shown, and not controverted: That an independent company, called the “Saco-Pattee Company,” had entered into a contract selling certain machinery to defendants and agreeing “to furnish men to erect, clothe, and start” the machinery, and were engaged in that work, and plaintiff was employed by defendant as a helper to aid them, and placed under the orders of one Jackson, who was foreman in charge of the work under said Saco-Pattee Company. Defendant paid the wages of plaintiff, but charged it against said Pattee Company. That the obstacle over which plaintiff stumbled and fell was a door of a carding machine, which was lying on the floor. That just as plaintiff’s foot came in contact with this door the lights ivent out and that whirled him around. That he grabbed at one of the standards on the side of the machine to break his fall, but missed it, and thus fell against one of the machines which had been put in motion by the Pattee Company people in setting up and testing the machinery. Plaintiff had not noticed this door there before. A little before this time the lights had “died down and then flared up.” The plaintiff (who was the only witness to the accident) testified, also, that there had been trouble with the lights for some time prior to the injury; sometimes they would have trouble each day, and sometimes they would be all right for a week; that he had heard orders given to the electrician about the lights, and there had been numerous efforts made by Mr. Wise, the electrician, to remedy the lights; that he had seen them working on them some 10 or 15 times during the five months he worked there; that after said work said lights seemed to be all right; that the repairs were made on Friday or Saturday, and Mr. Wise assured them the lights were all right, and the accident occurred on the following [149]*149Monday or Tuesday. It was in proof, also, that Mr. Vaughn, the cardroom boss, had been heard to complain to Mr. Massey, the superintendent of the electric plant, and that shortly thereafter the witness would, see Wise and his assistants at work on them.

The witness Anglin testified that in his opinion the dying down and flaring up of the lights was owing to defective globes; that they had done so twice that day, and that he had seen Wise putting new globes on and putting new lights in that morning; also that White, boss of spinning room, had complained of the lights to Mr. Massey, superintendent; that at one time witness was sent by White to Massey to ask him to turn on the lights, and he replied that he would, and that there would be good lights before witness got back there.

The witness Massy, who was superintendent of defendant’s company, testified that Wise, the electrician,was a competent electrician of seven or eight years experience; that the electric lighting apparatus was new and in perfect condition; that, when witness went into carding room a few minutes after the accident,'the electric light was burning brightly, and he had no knowledge of the light having gone out; that several weeks before that there had been a request for more, lights, and he had had them put in before the accident; that the only two causes which could make all the lights go out were, first, the burning out of the generator, which it would require four or five minutes to repair, or by cutting a wire or pulling out a switch, and, if all of them did go out and flash up, it must have been from throwing out a switch and immediately throwing it back on the main line. Witness explained the working of the lighting system, and stated that he had seen the lights go out probably 3 or 4 times, in 5 or 7 years from the burning out of a fuse or a globe becoming defective, and could not tell how long a fuse Avould last, as they varied, sometimes lasting much longer than at others. Several witnesses Avho were Avorking in the same room at the time the accident occurred stated that the lights did not go out at that time.

[150]*150Wise, the electrician, testified that he had been in that business 10 or 11 years, was- in the employ of the defendant, remembered the time of the accident; that he was in the dynamo room at that time; that at that time the lighting plant was in good condition, and no defects whatever in any part of the machine, and that the wires were in good condition; that he had never known all the lights to go out except when a fuse would blow out; that nothing but that, or shutting down the machine, would cause all the lights to go out, and neither occurred that evening; that the only way to cause the lights of one room to go out without affecting the others would be by pulling out the switch which connected that room with the dynamo; that while it was impossible to say that every globe was in perfect condition (as if air should get in one it would destroy the carbon), yet the entire plant wires, globes, etc., were in first class condition; that the mill was so constructed that there were eight lights on a circuit, and if the fuse of one circuit should blow out the eight lights would be extinguished, and if only one light went out -it would indicate that the globe had become defective.

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Bluebook (online)
41 So. 988, 148 Ala. 146, 1906 Ala. LEXIS 320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dallas-manfg-co-v-townes-ala-1906.