Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Adams

147 S.W. 384, 148 Ky. 513, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 511
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 23, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 147 S.W. 384 (Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Adams, 147 S.W. 384, 148 Ky. 513, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 511 (Ky. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Carroll —

Affirming each case.

These two appeals have been prosecuted on the same record and will be disposed of together.

E. Y. Adams, a boy about seventeen years old, while in the employ of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company in April, 1910, sustained injuries by falling from a high trestle; and, in December, 1910, while yet in the employ of the same company, he sustained further injuries by falling from a bridge. To recover damages for the injuries sustained in both of these accidents, he brought suit against the railroad company.

His petition contained two paragraphs. In the first paragraph he sought damages for the injuries sustained in April, 1910, setting up in substance that while he was engaged working in a safe place on a high trestle, he was hurriedly called by his foreman to go to another place and assist some men who were making an effort to change the position of a long and heavy piece of timber. That the timber which he was called to assist in moving was lying on the side of the trestle on a plank walk-way between the railroad track and the edge of the trestle, and about seven inches from the edge. That along the edge of the trestle there was a single railing, something over three feet high from the plank floor of the trestle, which railing was supported by posts about ten feet apart. That when in obedience to the command of his foreman to come he reached the timber, the foreman directed him to jump over the outside of the timber and on the seven-inch space between it and the edge of the trestle, and, while in this position and in the act oí assisting to lift the timber, his feet or hands slipped and he was precipitated to the ground below, a distance of nearly 35 feet.

In an amended petition, filed during the progress of the trial, he averred in substance that the foreman was guilty of gross negligence in ordering him to take this, dangerous position, the danger of which was fully [515]*515known, or by the exercise of reasonable care could have been known to the foreman, and was not known to or realized by him and conld not have been known to him under the circumstances by the exercise of ordinary care. That he was inexperienced in such work, and hurriedly called to help in an emergency, without previous notice of what he was to do, and ordered into a dangerous place without time to study the situation.

In the second paragraph of the petition, in which he sought to recover damages for the injuries sustained in December, he charged in substance that while working on a bridge, he was directed by the foreman to hold a large iron pin, weighing about 80 pounds, while the same was being driven out of its place in the bridge by another employe, and, that while in a stooping position holding the pin as it was being driven out, the pin was suddenly driven out of the hole by the blows of his co-employe, and the weight and momentum of the pin as it came out of the hole caused him to fall from the narrow place on the abutment on which he was standing, a distance of several feet, to the ice on the river below.

In an amended petition filed during the progress of the trial he further averred that it was gross negligence to order him to perform this dangerous work without explaining to him the danger which was fully known to the foreman in charge or could have been known by the exercise of ordinary care, and was not known to him and could not under the circumstances have been discovered by him.

Before taking up the merits of the case, we will notice two questions of practice that are raised. The petition, as stated, contained two paragraphs. The first one seeking a recovery on account of the trestle accident, and the second one seeking a recovery on account of the bridge accident. There is no prayer for relief of any kind in the first paragraph. This paragraph concluding with the words “Plaintiff says that by reason of said injuries he sustained damages in the sum of $20,-000.” The second paragraph, after averring that he sustained damages in the sum of $20,000, concludes with a prayer for judgment “against the defendant for damages in the sum of-$20,000, for his costs herein expended, and for all general and proper relief.”

On the trial of the case, at the conclusion of all the evidence, the trial judge sustained the motion of the railroad company for a peremptory instruction as to the [516]*516cause of action set out in the second paragraph of the petition, and, in obedience to this instruction, the jury on this ground of complaint returned a verdict for the •defendant. As to the cause of action set out in the first paragraph of the petition, the court overruled the motion for a peremptory instruction, and the jury returned "a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $6,000.

Prom the judgment giving the peremptory Adams appeals, and from the judgment on the verdict the railroad company appeals.

It is now insisted, as it was in the lower court, that no judgment should have been entered upon this verdict, because the first paragraph of the petition upon which the case went to the jury did not contain a prayer for judgment in any sum. And, it is said that in the absence of a prayer for judgment, no judgment should have been entered on this paragraph. There is no doubt that under section 83 of the Civil Code, providing that:

“Several causes of action may be united, if each affeet all the parties to the action, may be brought in the same county, and may be prosecuted by the same kind of action; and if all of them be brought * * * (6) for injuries to person and property. ’ ’

The plaintiff had the right to state the two causes of action in two separate paragraphs, as he did, and to have relief on the cause of action set up in each paragraph, in the same trial and in a single recovery. But, when a pleading properly contains, as this one did, more than one paragraph, each paragraph should be sufficient in itself, or, in other words, state a good cause of action, without reference to the other paragraph. Black v. Holloway, 41 S. W., 576; Daily v. O’Brien, 96 S. W., 521.

As each of the paragraphs of the petition as amended did state a good cause of action, without reference to the other paragraph the particular point for decision is, was it indispensable that each paragraph of the petition should contain a prayer for relief, or, was a general prayer at the conclusion of the last paragraph for all the relief sought, sufficient. Under section 90 of the Civil Code:

“The petition must state facts which constitute a ' cause of action in favor, of the plaintiff against the defendant, and must demand the specific relief to which the plaintiff considers himself entitled; and may eon[517]*517tain a general prayer for any other relief to which the plaintiff may appear to he entitled.” * * #

It'is, therefore, necessary that every petition should contain a prayer for relief. But it would be very technical to rule that the plaintiff could not have the relief specifically prayed for at the conclusion of the last paragraph, when it appeared that he was entitled to this character of relief on the averments of the paragraph to which no prayer was attached. The prayer for relief really forms no part of the statement of the cause of action. It is merely a demand for the relief to which the pleader claims he is entitled on the statement of facts set out in the body of his pleading.

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Bluebook (online)
147 S.W. 384, 148 Ky. 513, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-nashville-railroad-v-adams-kyctapp-1912.