Eureka Co. v. Bass

81 Ala. 200
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 81 Ala. 200 (Eureka Co. v. Bass) 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
Eureka Co. v. Bass, 81 Ala. 200 (Ala. 1886).

Opinion

SOMERYILLE, J.

— The action is brought for the alleged negligent killing of the plaintiff’s intestate, one Moyle, an employee of the defendant, which occurred whiíe the deceased was engaged in superintending the blasting of iron-ore in the defendant’s mine, and was produced by the explosion of dynamite used in the process of blasting. The accident occurred in December of the year 1884. The preparation for blasting was conducted by drilling a long narrow hole in the iron-ore rock, five or six feet deep, and about one and a half or two inches in diameter. In this cavity was inserted a dynamite cartridge, to which were attached a percussion cap and a fuse.

The negligence specially alleged on defendant’s part was in failing to supply a good quality of fuse, after notice of an existing defect, which rendered the further use of this material dangerous to the employees, a fact well known to the deceased. The deceased remained in the service of the defendant five or six days after acquiring knowledge and giving notice of the defect, before he was fatally injured— his death being caused by his entrance into the mine about twenty minutes after the lighting of the fuse, under the belief that the fire communicated to it had been extinguished. Good'fuse was shown to ordinarily produce an explosion of the dynamite in from two to three minutes under similar circumstances. The main defense relied on is that of contributory negligence on the part of Moyle, the deceased.

The employer or master is bound to use due care and diligence, not only to furnish in the first instance, but to maintain, suitable and safe material, machinery and instrument[212]*212alities for the work or duty required of his employees, and he is ordinarily liable for any injury resulting from his neglect of this duty. — L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Allen, 78 Ala. 494; Buzzell v. Laconia M’fg Co., 48 Me. 113; Wood on Master and Servant, § 359. But the law imposes no obligation on the master to take any better care of the servant than the latter may be reasonably expected to take of himself, and every employee, upon entering service, presumptively contracts to assume all the usual and ordinary risks of the employment. — 1 Addison on Torts (Wood’s ed.), § 564, p. 603. “In legal presumption the compensation is adjusted accordingly.” — Farwell v. The Boston, &c., R. R. Co., 4 Metc. 49. There is no difficulty about these principles, which have been often decided, and with them the rulings of the court below in no wise conflict.

The two points most earnestly, pressed upon us are : (1) That the conduct of the deceased, in entering the mine within so short a time as twenty minutes from the moment of setting fire to the fuse, must, as matter of law, be adjudged by the court to be such negligence as to bar a recovery in this case, such conduct, as is argued, being reckless, and contributing proximately to the death of the deceased : (2) That, even if this is not so, the deceased was guilty of contributory negligence by continuing in the defendant’s service for an unreasonable length of time after notice given, and the failure of the defendant to repair the defect complained of as existing in the fuse.

The first contention does not strike us favorably. We can not say, considering only the undisputed testimony of the case, that it is so free from doubt as to admit of no other rational inference except that of negligence, or that different minds could not reasonably draw opposite conclusions from these facts touching the question of Moyle’s negligence in prematurely entering the mine by which he was brought to his death. The inference of negligence not being clear and certain, the question of its existence was not a question of law, but of fact, and as such was properly left to the determination of the jury.— City Council of Montgomery v. Wright, 72 Ala. 411; L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Allen, 78 Ala, 494. The demurrer to the several counts of the complaint was for this reason properly overruled ; and so, likewise, there was no error in refusing the general charge requested by the plaintiff.

The second proposition is one which is not entirely free from doubt, and upon which the authorities are not harmonious. In fact, it does not seem to have been clearly considered, or stated with any great degree of precision in [213]*213the earlier decisions bearing on the subject of the servant’s contributory negligence, resulting in his injury from the continued use of defective appliances in the prosecution of his employment. The question is presented in this case by the refusal of the court to give the charge numbered 18 in the record. This charge substantially asserts the proposition, that the deceased, if cognizant of the defect in the fuse, could remain in the defendant company’s service only for a reasonable time, after notice of such defect was given to the company, to see if the promise to remedy it, as made by the company, would be performed, and if he remained longer, and continued using the defective fuse for an unreasonable length of time, and was killed by reason of such negligence, the plaintiff would be barred of a recovery in the action.

This charge was, in our opinion, a correct enunciation of the law as applicable to the case, and should have been given.

The employee or servant, must be charged with the exercise of ordinary prudence. He is not compellable, nor is it prudent for him, to remain in the service of his employer, if by doing so he subjects himself to any extraordinary hazard or peril not incident to the usual mode of conducting the business or employment. If he has notice of any defect in the appliances or instrumentalities used by him, from which injury may be reasonably apprehended, he should, generally speaking, quit the service for his own protection. Notice of the defect merely does not,.however, impute to him negligence. He must have' notice of the danger which then becomes a circumstance from which negligence may be inferred, if he continues silently and without objection in the prosecution of his employment. — Wood on Master & Servant, §§ 336, 352, 359.

It is everywhere admitted, that, if the danger encountered by the employee, through his continuance in the service, is so obvious and inevitable, as that no person of ordinary prudence — that no one but a reckless man — would venture upon it, under the circumstances of the particular case, then the continuance of the peril is at his own risk, and the employer is acquitted of responsibility, upon the ground of the employee’s contributory negligence. — Patterson v. Pittsburg, etc. Railroad Co. (76 Penn. St. 389), s. c. 18 Amer. Rep. 412 ; Snow v. Housatonic Railroad Co., 8 Allen (Mass.) 441.

Where, however, the employee or servant, electing not to abandon his employment, gives notice to the employer of such defect in the appliances or instrumentalities used by him, and the employer promises to remedy the defect, the relationship of the contracting parties at once undergoes a [214]*214change. The assurances of the employer that the danger shallbe removed is an agreement by him that he will assume the risk incident to the danger for a reasonable time. It obviates the objection that the continuance of the servant in the service was an implied engagement by him to assume such risks, pursuant to the original presumption upon his entering the service. —Hough v. Railroad Co., 100 U. S, 213 ; Cooley on Torts, 559.

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Bluebook (online)
81 Ala. 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eureka-co-v-bass-ala-1886.