Logan v. Missouri Valley Bridge & Iron Co.

249 S.W. 21, 157 Ark. 528, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 207
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 19, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 249 S.W. 21 (Logan v. Missouri Valley Bridge & Iron Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Logan v. Missouri Valley Bridge & Iron Co., 249 S.W. 21, 157 Ark. 528, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 207 (Ark. 1923).

Opinion

Wood, J.

The appellant instituted this action against the appellee to recover damages for personal injuries. The complaint alleged substantially the following:

The appellee is a Kansas corporation authorized and doing business in this State. . On the 12th day of September, 1921, it was engaged in building a bridge from the foot of Garrison Avenue in the city of Fort Smith, Arkansas, on the south side of the river, to a point on the opposite bank on the north side in the State of Oklahoma. The appellant was a resident of the State of Arkansas and an employee of the appellee. He was required, as a part of his duties, to oil the steam shovel or clam-shell which was used by the appellee in excavating the earth from the river for the foundations of the bridge. The work had progressed from the Arkansas' side to a point beyond mid-stream and to the Oklahoma side of the river. The appellee maintained its office from which the work of construction was conducted in Fort Smith, Arkansas, where it hired its employees. The appellant and other employe^, in going to their work in the morning and in quitting at night, checked in at the Fort Smith office, and started to their work from that office and were paid at such office. Appellant, while engaged about his work on the day above mentioned, on the end of the bridge in Oklahoma, was severely injured, as lie alleges, through the negligence of the appellee. The manner of such negligence and the nature' of his injuries he specifically sets forth. He alleged that his relation to the appellee ,at the time was purely contractual; that the contract of employment was entered into between linn and the appellee in Arkansas and was made with reference to the laws of Arkansas; that these laws became a part of the contract, and that, under the laws of Arkanas, it was the duty of appellee to furnish appellant a reasonably safe place to work and reasonably safe tools and appliances with which to perform his work, which duties, the appellant alleges, appellee failed to perform. The appellant concludes his complaint by alleging that the injury was caused solely by the breach of contract between appellant and the appellee in that the appellee negligently failed to furnish him a safe place to work and suitable appliances and tools with which to do his work. The allegations of the complaint specify in detail the particulars in which the appellant charges that the appellee failed to discharge its duties as master toward him as servant. He concludes his complaint with a prayer for damages in the sum of $50,000.

The appellee filed the following demurrer to the complaint: “First. It does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. Second. Because the action, which sounds in tort, was committed in the State of Oklahoma, and is governed by the laws of said State, and can be prosecuted only in the court having proper jurisdiction in said State. Third. Because this court has no jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the complaint.” The court sustained the demurrer. The appellant stood on his complaint, and the court entered a judgment dismissing the same, from which is this appeal.

The appellant contends, first, that his complaint states a cause of action against the appellee for a breach of contract entered into in this State which entitles him to recover damages under the laws of Arkansas; and second, that appellant, being a resident of Arkansas, and having been employed by the appellee in Arkansas, may enforce in the-courts of this State the liability of the appellee for the injury done him, through its negligence, while in its employ, under the Oklahoma Workmen’s Compensation Act.

(a). In construing a pleading to determine whether it states a cause of action and consequent liability growing out of and caused by a breach of contract, or whether it states a cause of action growing out of and caused by a tort — in other words, whether the cause of action be ex contractu or ex delicto — the allegations of the complaint must be considered as a whole. As was said in Fordyce v. Nix, 58 Ark. 136, “the character of the action must be determined by the nature of the grievance, rather than the form of the declaration.” Now, when this complaint is taken by its four corners, it seems clear to us that the pleader intended by its allegations to state a cause of action sounding in damages for a tort, rather than a cause of action wherein the tort was waived and liability and damages growing out of a breach of contract only were insisted upon. While the allegations of the complaint set forth that the relation between the appellant and the appellee was that of master and servant, by virtue of the contract of employment, and stated the duties of the one to the other growing out of such relation, and that the injury was caused solely by a breach of such duties, yet the manner of the injury is specifically set forth as follows: “That the defendant negligently failed to furnish him a safe place to work, and in failing to furnish him with suitable appliances and tools about which and with which he was required to work, in this, to-wit: that said defendant company allowed and permitted the cross-pieces nailed against said boom for use as a ladder to become rotten and unsafe, so that when the plaintiff placed his weight thereon, on climbing said ladder, the said cross-piece upon which he stepped pulled loose, and, being in its rotten condition, the nails which held it in place pulled through said rotten piece, the defective condition of which said piece said defendant knew, or with reasonable care and diligence might have known and have repaired the same, and by so doing would not have been guilty of a breach of the said contract as aforesaid. * * * Plaintiff states that, by reason of the negligence aforesaid of the said defendant in failing to comply with the terms of said contract as aforesaid, he has been injured and damaged in the sum of $50,000.”

Now, it was necessary in the action ex delicto, which we construe this to be, for the appellant to allege that the contractual relation of employer and employee existed between him and the appellee, because if he had been a mere volunteer, interloper, or trespasser, at the time of his injury, the appellee would have owed him no duty, and hence he could have had no cause of action against the appellee even for the tort. But in a cause of action in which the appellant purposed to waive the tort and claim damages only for a breach of contract, it was Wholly unnecessary for appellant to emphasize the fact, as he did, that the “company negligently failed to furnish him a safe place to work” and “with reasonable care and diligence might have known and repaired,” etc., and “by reason of the negligence aforesaid in failing to comply with the terms of its contract,” etc. Such allegations are peculiarily apposite in an action of tort, but they are wholly unnecessary in an action wherein the tort is waived and only a breach of the contract relied upon. "With painstaking amplification the pleader has stressed the contract relation between appellant and appellee and its breach, but we are nevertheless impressed, after consideration of all the allegations of the complaint, that the cause of action should be construed as one ex delicto and not one ex contractu.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
249 S.W. 21, 157 Ark. 528, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/logan-v-missouri-valley-bridge-iron-co-ark-1923.