Holland v. Tenn. Coal, Iron & Railroad

91 Ala. 444
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 91 Ala. 444 (Holland v. Tenn. Coal, Iron & Railroad) 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
Holland v. Tenn. Coal, Iron & Railroad, 91 Ala. 444 (Ala. 1890).

Opinion

McCLELLAN, J.

This is an action for damages for personal injuries to appellant’s intestate, resulting in his death. The complaint contains three counts, each of which relies upon the negligence of the deiendant company, and not upon that of fellow-servants. The case is, therefore, not bought under the employer’s act (Code, §§ 2590 et seq.) The first count alleges that the defendant, being engaged in the business of operating a furnace for the purpose of smelting iron ore, so negligently conducted said business as to cause molten iron to come in contact with the person of plaintiff’s intestate, inflicting injuries from which he died a few days afterwards. The second and third counts proceed on the theory, that the defendant negligently employed incompetent servants in the particular work upon which they and the intestate were engaged at the time of the accident, and the injury resulted from the 'incompetency of these co-servants of the intestate. The trial developed three controverted issues: 1st, whether defendant was negligent in employing stock-house men having no special knowledge, skill or experience, to do the work in which the injury occurred; 2d, whether defendant was negligent in failing to instruct said employés as to the perils incident to the work they were put to do; and 3d, whether plaintiff’s intestate was himself guilty of negligence which proximately contributed to the injury.

1. With respect to the care a master or employer must exercise in the selection of servants, and in the use of machinery .and appliances in his business, our own decisions, following long and well established principles, leave no room for doubt. The master is in no case an insurer of the absolute safety of the appliances and machinery employed in the business. He is in no case held to an undertaking to select absolutely competent and careful servants. The rule requires of him no more than the exercise of reasonable care in either case — such care only as men of reasonable and ordinary prudence exercise; and when he has done this, he can not be held responsible for injuries which result from the incompetency of servants, or latent defects in machinery, so selected and employed. The only further duty then upon him is, the exercise of care in ascertaining any incompetency of the servant, or defect in the machinery, which the service may develop, and thereupon discharging the one, and discarding the other. The selection of a servant must, of course, be made with a view to the nature of the employment. If it involves special knowledge or ex-[451]*451perienee, only men of special knowledge and experience should be employed. If the work may be well done by the unskilled and inexperienced, it can not be said that the master is lacking in the measure of care he owes to other employés, should he employ unskilled and inexperienced men upon it.—M. & O. R. R. Co. v. Thomas, 42 Ala. 672; Smoot v. M & M. R. R. Co., 67 Ala. 13; Tyson v. S. & N. R. R. Co., 61 Ala. 554; M. & M. R. R. Co. v. Smith, 59 Ala. 245.

2. The men employed in the work of cutting a trench, for the purpose of drawing off the “boil” of molten iron, were stock-house men. It appears that the ordinary duties of such men were not such as to afford them any training or experience with respect to the work these employés were put to do, and it did not appear in fact that they had had any experience or training. As bearing on the question of defendant’s care and diligence in employing them for this purpose, evidence was received, against plaintiff’s objection, that many well regulated furnaces habitually employed this class of men for this particular service.

The assignments of error bring under review the ruling of the court in this regard. It is admitted in argument, and fully established in our decisions, that the custom and usage of other well regulated businesses of the like kind, as to the use of certain machinery and mechanical appliances, may always be adduced in evidence, as tending to negative the charge of negligence, when that charge is based upon the use of such m achinery and appliances by the defendant.—L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Allen, 78 Ala. 494; Ga. Pac. Railway Co. v. Propst, 83 Ala. 518; Ala. Gr. So. R. R. Co. v. Arnold, 84 Ala. 159. But it is insisted that the same rule does not apply with respect to the employment of human beings. W e are unable to perceive any sound reason for this insistence, at least as applied to this case. The presumption is, that well regulated furnaces exercise due care in the conduct of their business. If it is customary for them to employ a particular class .of men for a particular purpose, the further presumption is, that that class of men are competent for the work in hand; and their competency may be the result either of a special knowledge or experience with respect to the particular thing to be done, or from the work being such as to require no special knowledge or experience. In either case, the fact of the custom or usage of prudently managed furnaces to employ that class of men is some evidence that the defendant company was not guilty of negligence in their employment.

3. Whether the defendant was negligent or not in failing to notify and instruct the intestate and his fellow-servants as [452]*452to the dangers of the work they were directed to do, depends upon the further consideration, whether the peril involved in it was patent or latent — such as could be seen and known by ordinary care and prudence in the use of the senses, or such as was obscured and could not be seen or appreciated. If the former, the law is well settled, that the. master need not advise his servants of its existence, and instruct them as to the means necessary to its avoidance, since they, equally with himself, are held to know both the fact of peril, and how to avoid or escape it.—Wood’s Master & Servant, § 335; Perry v. Marsh, 25 Ala. 659; 1 Thompson on Neg., 971, § 2; p. 979, § 9; Shear. & Red. Neg., § 203. On the other hand, it is the imperative duty of the master to inform the servant of all latent dangers incident to the service, and instruct him as to their avoidance.—Wood’s Mast. & Serv. § 354, and authorities supra.

The evidence tended, in some degree, to show two distinct elements of danger incident to the work, upon which the plaintiff's intestate was engaged when the injury was suffered —one open to ordinary observation, and capable of being measured and judged of by men of no special knowledge or instruction in the premises ; and the other latent in character, with nothing which could be seen and understood by the unskilled and uninstructed to give warning of its presence, or suggest means of avoiding it. The “boil” of iron, while its lower part had sunk down considerably — two and a half, or three feet, may be — into the earth, yet protruded above the surface, and was visible to those engaged in cutting the trench. It was common knowledge, appreciable by inexperienced as well as experienced persons, that if the ditch was open entirely up to the melted mass, its bottom being below the lowest estimated point of the “boil,” the iron would immediately flow into and along the trench, thus imperilling those who should be in there at the time. This was the open and unobscured danger, which was sought to be guarded against by leaving a wall of earth between the trench and the “boil,” of from eight to twelve inches thick, the purpose being to break down this wall by piercing it with a long crow-bar after the laborers had left the trench.

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Bluebook (online)
91 Ala. 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holland-v-tenn-coal-iron-railroad-ala-1890.