Gardner v. Birmingham Machine & F. Co.

59 So. 649, 178 Ala. 571, 1912 Ala. LEXIS 409
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedApril 18, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 59 So. 649 (Gardner v. Birmingham Machine & F. Co.) 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
Gardner v. Birmingham Machine & F. Co., 59 So. 649, 178 Ala. 571, 1912 Ala. LEXIS 409 (Ala. 1912).

Opinion

SAYRE, J.

— Plaintiff in error Avas also plaintiff in the court below. His suit was brought under the Employer’s Liability Act. Counts 1 and 5 were framed under subsection 2 of the act as stated in section 3910 of the Code. They seem to have dropped out of sight during the trial. No ruling as to them, qr the issue made by them, is in question. Counts 13 and 14 stated [574]*574a case under the second clause of subdivision 4 of the section. There was demurrer to these counts, but the record discloses no ruling. Without intimation as to the sufficiency of these counts, we will treat the demurrer as having been waived. Several special pleas of contributory negligence had been filed before these counts were introduced by -amendment. These pleas were not refiled; but there are various indications in the court’s oral charge to the jury, and in the special charges given and refused, that these pleas were treated as answers to all the counts of the complaint. We will so consider them. Counts 9, 10, 11, and 12 proceeded under the first subsection of the act as for a defect in an electric crane used by the defendant. Errors are assigned to rulings by which the court overruled demurrers to several of the special pleas as answers to these counts. These counts were all intended to state the same phase of plaintiff’s case. Twelve, however, goes furthest into detail, and undertakes to show how the alleged defect operated to cause plaintiff’s injury by averring that after one Riley, who had charge of the crane, in response to a signal from one White, had turned on the electric current and set in motion the crane used to move or hoist the piece of machinery on which plaintiff was at work, but before the piece of machinery was hoisted high enough to throw it off the scaffold and face plate upon which it rested, said Riley saw that plaintiff would be injured by the further movement of the machinery, and attempted to cut off the current and reverse the motion of the crane, “but that, owing to a defect in the said crane, it failed to reverse, and the machinery was further hoisted or jerked to one side or forward, and was thrown off the scaffold and face plate on which it had been placed, and was caused to fall into a deep pit,” and plaintiff along with it, [575]*575whereby he was injured. Plea 3 says “that plaintiff was himself guilty of negligence which proximately contributed to his injury in this: That plaintiff, with knoAvledge that said piece of machinery, to wit, the hub of a flywheel, Aveighing several tons, Avas insecurely suspended over an open pit, AAdiich Avas several feet deep, and in danger of falling, and Avith the knowledge that, should same fall Avlien he Avas upon or near the same injury Avould probably result to him, nevertheless plaintiff negligently stood upon or dangerously near the said piece of machinery, whereby the same fell into said pit and injured plaintiff.”

Appellant lays stress upon the proposition that the negligence alleged in the plea does not appear to have had proximate causal connection with plaintiff’s injury, if that was caused primarily by the means and in the manner alleged in the counts. He thinks his argument finds most favorable illustration in the consideration of the plea as an ansAver to the twelfth count, Avhich avc have quoted in part. As the accident is there stated, the defect in the crane did not set in motion the force A\rhich threw or caused plaintiff to fall into the pit; it operated to his hurt by preventing the effective interposition of an effort to save him, after the craneman had become aware of the fact that the movement of the crane had produced a situation of danger for plaintiff. “This plea,” says the appellant, “attempts to deny liability because of a condition which existed prior in point of causation to the alleged cause of the injury.” Probably the argument was conceived in the light of the facts as they appear in the evidence?, rather than Avith a strict regard to the facts as they appeared in averment only. It seems to mean that, since plaintiff is, in substance, alleged in the plea to have remained in the same place of danger in which his duty required [576]*576him to be, and in which Riley, according to the complaint, saw he would be overtaken, unless the crane could be stopped, and since the event, in the nature of things, moved so rapidly as to preclude the idea of his escape after the machinery began to fall, it sufficiently appears that plaintiff was not guilty of contributory .negligence. If we could look to the proof, we would say it was impossible that plaintiff could have been guilty of contributory negligence in remaining at his place after the machinery began to fall. Thereafter he had no time to form a judgment of the new situation, or to act upon that judgment. And it is also out of the question that the man in charge of the crane, which he operated from his place in a cage some distance away by moving a lever or controller, could have prevented plaintiff’s fall, after he became aware of the fact that the piece of machinery would fall. In fact neither the counts nor the plea had more than a theoretical support in the evidence, all of which really went to show that the defect in the crane had nothing to do with the accident, but that it was caused, either by plaintiff’s careless adjustment of the chains by which the crane lifted or moved the piece of machinery, or by a premature signal to the operator of the crane; it being a matter of dispute whether that signal was given by plaintiff himself, or by one Bob White, to whom authority in that, behalf had been delegated by the common employer, as alleged in counts 13 and 14. But, of course, we consider only the averments of the complaint and the plea in passing on a demurrer to the latter. By ■reference to the facts so averred, we do not get that sure and intimate acquaintance with what happened which would require or authorize us to say, as matter of law, either that the craneman could not have prevented the accident, had his machine not been defective in the re[577]*577spect charged, or, on the other hand, that plaintiff might not have avoided injury by the use of due care, after he became aware that the piece of machinery on which he was working would fall, and he probably along Avith it. The averment of the plea is that “plaintiff Avas himself guilty of negligence which proximately contributed to his injuries in this,” and then such facts are averred as that from them a jury might infer negligence. We think no error has been shoAvn in respect to the court’s ruling on the sufficiency of this plea; and for like reasons those assignments of error which complain of the court’s rulings on plea 5 as an answer to the several counts must be held for naught.

Plea 7 Avas clearly bad as a plea' of contributory negligence. It failed to aver contribution. But it was not intended for a plea of contributory negligence. Its definite purpose was to plead plaintiff’s assumption of the risk of any injury from the negligence alleged in the various counts of the complaint. The facts averred do not show an assumption of risk. — L. & N. R. R. v. Handley, 174 Ala. 593, 56 South. 539. The principle of the case just cited, and of the cases it folloAved, was limited to actions brought under the second, third, and fifth subdivisions of section 3910 of the Code, for the reason, probably, that the decision of those cases required nothing more. But the last clause of subsection 4 states a species of superintendence, thus putting it in the same case with subsection 2, so far as concerns the distinction between the doctrines of contributory negligence and assumption of risk taken by the decisions to which we have referred.

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Bluebook (online)
59 So. 649, 178 Ala. 571, 1912 Ala. LEXIS 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardner-v-birmingham-machine-f-co-ala-1912.