Hubbard v. Central of Georgia Railway Co.

63 S.E. 19, 131 Ga. 658, 1908 Ga. LEXIS 174
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 11, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 63 S.E. 19 (Hubbard v. Central of Georgia Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hubbard v. Central of Georgia Railway Co., 63 S.E. 19, 131 Ga. 658, 1908 Ga. LEXIS 174 (Ga. 1908).

Opinion

Fish, C. J.

(After stating the facts.)

As will have been noticed, in reading the above statement of facts, the ease was not laid upon any alleged common-law. liability of a master to his servant for injuries caused by a defect in the premises or appliances of the business, but was expressly and specifically predicated, in the petition, alone upon the statute of Alabama, which was in terms set forth, and the liability claimed was definitely based upon that portion of subdivision 1 of the statute quoted, which provides that the employer shall be liable when a personal injury received by his employee is caused by reason of any defect in the condition of the way connected with or used in the business of the employer. This will be seen by reference to paragraphs 12 and 13 of the petition, which are quoted above. Counsel for plaintiff in error, in their brief filed in this court, say: “This action is based on subsection 1 of the statute of Alabama, contained in section 1749 of the Civil Code of Alabama, 1896, which subsection makes the master liable to answer in damages to a servant injured while in the employment of the master, ‘when the injury is caused by reason of any defect in thei condition of the ways, works, machinery, or plant connected with or used in the business, of the master or employer;’ ” and that “the sole question now presented for determination is whether or not, under the facts alleged, the wire was such part of the ‘ways, works, machinery, or plant’ of the defendant as to enable the plaintiff to maintain his action.” While the ground of the demurrer was, in view of the allegations of the petition, somewhat broader than was necessary, still the demurrer went to the very foundation upon which the petition rested; and it having been sustained, the real and only question presented for adjudication by the writ of error is, whether the wire stretched above and across the track of the defendant, as alleged, was a defect in the condition of the way connected with or used in the business of the defendant. Counsel for plaintiff in error do not contend, nor did the petition allege, as we have already noted, that the wire was part of the works, machinery or plant of the defendant.

The Alabama statute under consideration (Civil Code, 1896, par. 1749, Code 1907, par. 3910), “as far as it goes,” as was said in Mobile & B. R. Co. v. Holborn, 84 Ala. 133 (4 So. 146), “is a [661]*661substantial copy of the English act entitled 'the employer’s liability act/ of 1880.” See copies of both acts,' 2 Labatt on Master & Servant, 1926-1930. The Supreme Court of that State has dealt with the statute in question in a number of cases.' In Kansas City, M. & B. B. Co. v. Burton, 97 Ala. 240 (12 So. 89), the plaintiff, a switchman in the employment of the defendant railroad company, while performing his duties on a ear forming a part of a train moving on defendant’s main line, was injured by being struck by a refrigerator-car which had been left on what was known as the cold-storage track, in close proximity to the main line. On the point as to whether the proximity of the refrigerator-car to the track on which defendant’s train was being operated constituted a defect in that track, the court, speaking through McClellan, J., after stating that the statute was substantially copied from the English employer’s liability act, said: “It is the settled construction of the act in that country that no mere obstruction on dr too near to the 'ways’ is a defect therein within subsection 1. The presence of no foreign body or substance on or "dangerously near to the track of a railway, which does not affect the track itself or its condition inherently considered, but is only an obstacle with which moving trains would collide, can be said to constitute a defect in the track. There must be some inherent condition of a permanent nature of the ways, works, machinery, or plant, which unfits the thing for its uses — some weakness of construction with reference to the proposed uses (as where the ordinary appliances for drawing buckets of water from a well are used to lower and hoist men) — some inadaptation to its purposes (as where the sides of a coke lift are not sufficiently fenced to safely hoist its burden: Heske v. Samuelson & Co., 12 L. R. (Q. B.) 30) — some break or misplacement of the parts, or the absence of some part, some innate abnormal quality of the thing which renders its use dangerous (as Jhe viciousness of a horse constituting 'plant’ in the business of a wharfinger: Yarmouth v. France, 19 L. R. (Q. B.) 647) — some obstacle in the way of use or obstruction to use which is a part of the thing itself, or of the condition of the thing itself, as holes in or ice upon a way — or the like — to constitute a defect in the ways, works, machinery, of plant, under the statute.” The learned Justice then quoted the following language of Stephen, J., in McG-riffin v. Palmer’s Shipbuilding & Iron Co.. [662]*66210 L. R. (Q. B.) 5: “I do not think we ought to put so wide a construction on the words ‘condition of the way’ as to include obstacles lying upon the way, which obstacles do not in any degree alter the powers of the way or alter its fitness for the purposes for which it is generally employed, and can not be said to be incorporated with it. It seems to me, therefore, that the presence of this piece of tap on the road can not be called a defect in the way.” Judge McClellan further said: “In the case from which this language is taken, a workman was killed in consequence of a way, along which it was his duty to draw a bogie loaded with puddled iron at white heat, being obstructed. The obstruction consisted of a piece of tap or slag which had been placed by a fellow-laborer so near to the tramway on which the bogie ran as to collide with it. This was held not to be a defect in the way or in the condition of the way. . . This is in principle precisely our case. We think the doctrine of this case eminently reasonable and sound, and we adopt it; and this notwithstanding a contrary doctrine- — -that coal left too near a railway track constituted a defect therein — appears to have been taken for granted in the case of Highland Avenue & Belt R. R. Co. v. Walters, 91 Ala. 435 [8 So. 357]. Clearly a moveable object temporarily placed in dangerous proximity to a railroad track is not a defect in the condition of such track, within the English doctrine, which we adopt as the sounder and better. The track is in the same condition after as it was before the object was so placed. A ear left standing on the main line of a railway is certainly as obstructive of its use as one too near it on a side-track; yet it would be absurd to say that the track under that car, the ‘way’ upon which it stands and which was constructed especially to support it, is rendered defective when it is only subserving the uses for which it was intended.”

In Louisville & Nashville R. Co. v. Bouldin, 110 Ala. 185 (20 So. 325), it was held: “A foreign substance, having no other connection or relation with the track of a railroad than arises from its having been left in dangerous proximity thereto, is not a defect in the condition of any such track or roadway; and when, in an action against a railroad by the administrator of a' deceased employee, to recover damages, the complaint alleges that the intestate’s death was due to a defect in the condition of defendant’s railroad track, in that an oil-box, which was part of a car, had [663]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Krites v. Plott
222 N.C. 679 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1943)
Hicks v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad
86 S.E. 250 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1915)
Kansas City & Memphis Railway Co. v. Huff
173 S.W. 419 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 S.E. 19, 131 Ga. 658, 1908 Ga. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hubbard-v-central-of-georgia-railway-co-ga-1908.