Massey v. Oates

143 Ala. 248
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 143 Ala. 248 (Massey v. Oates) 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
Massey v. Oates, 143 Ala. 248 (Ala. 1904).

Opinions

McCLELLAN, C. J.

Molton, the owner of a business .house abutting on a public street in Birmingham, made a contract with Massey, a man of experience and competency in the work, to lay a cement or concrete pavement on the sidewalk in front of this house. Massey was to furnish the material and labor, and his compensation was to- be one dollar per yard of the pavement. It >vas understood that the work was to be promptly done -and in such way as to involve the least inconvenience to the public and to Holton’s tenants in said house. Molton reserved no control over Massey in respect of the work, nor did he assume to direct him in any way during its progress. A part of the work thus undertaken by Massey was the protection of the concrete pavement after being laid while it ivas drying and hardening. There were two ways of doing this: one method was to close in the space so that nobody could get on the pavement; and the other was to superimpose a temporary pavement or walkway of planking, so that the sidewalk could be used.by the public and Molton’s tenants while the concrete was hardening. In view of the understanding between Molton and Massey that ihe convenience of the public and of the occupants of the house should be conserved as far as possible in doing the work, it may be said to have been in their contemplation that the latter of these methods should be pursued, that is, that a board walkway should be. constructed over the concrete so that the sidewalk could be used during the several days-— from four to seven — that would be required for the pavement to harden. So that it may be said that Molton contracted with Massey primarily to lay a concrete pavement and secondarily or incidentally to construct a temporary board sidewalk in front of said house. The municipal authorities issued to Molton, or to Massey on behalf of Molton, a license for this proposed betterment of the sidewalk, which of course imported authority to construct the incidental temporary board walk; and, by the terms of the contract between Molton and Massey, the work was to be done according to specifications of the city’s engineer. Massey proceeded with the work, laid the concrete pavement, and, to protect it while hard-[251]*251ening, constructed over it at a lieiglit of some six or seven inches a plank walk or floor to be used meantime as the sidewalk in front of the building. According to plaintiff’s evidence this plank walk ivas defectively constructed, and in consequence the plaintiff, while attempting to use it as the sidewalk in passing along the street, lost his footing and fell, receiving the injuries he’now complains of. His action is against both Molton and Massey; lie recovered against both, and the sole question reserved on the trial for our consideration is whether Molton is liable.

It is, we understand, conceded in the case, and- certainly the proposition cannot be even plausibly gainsaid, that, on the uncontroverted facts above stated, 'Massey was an independent contractor in the premises, and not the agent, servant, or mere employe of Molton. Nor is there any controversy as to the general rule of non-liability of a party, who thus contracts with another to do certain work, for negligence of that other in doing the work, whereby a tliird person suffers. It is recognized as a general proposition the doctrine respond-eat superior has no application under such circumstances. But it is insisted, and was held by the city court, that this doctrine does not obtain in this case; but to the contrary, that an exception to the general rule, to- the effect, that, where injury results from the very thing contracted to de .done, both the party having that tiling done and the independent contractor doing it are responsible, applies here and fixes liability on Molton as, apart from this principle, it is fixed upon Massey. That there is such an exception to the general doctrine of non-liability in such cases is not to be questioned; it is, indeed, as well established as the rule itself. Both the general rule and this exception to it are as well stated and as aptly illustrated by Mr. Justice Sommerville, in Birmingham v. McCary, (84 Ala. 469), as anywhere in the books. The eliiefest difficulty which courts have encountered lies in the application of the law to particular cases, for while there is substantial agreement in the formulation of both the rule and the exception, the decisions are widely divergent in respect of the practical operation of each, especially the exception. Borne of [252]*252them hold the contractor — Molton here — liable under the exception in question. Others under like circumstances hold the contrary. We agree with the latter. To restate the case in the immediate particular involved, at least with fairness, if not with favor, to the plaintiff: Molton contracted with Massey to construct the temporary board sidewalk. The construction of that walk was not a dangerous thing to plaintiff or the public. It was a perfectly safe thing to do. And properly constructed it was not dangerous to anybody. Its proper-construction was the thing committed by Molton to Massey; such construction was possible and easily practicable. The injury to the plaintiff did not result from the doing of this thing, which and which alone Molton set Massey to do. But it resulted purely from the collateral and wholly unnecessary negligence of Massey in the manner of doing this thing which, but for such negligence, would have involved no danger. The case would be entirely different had the .contract been for Massey to dig a trench in the street, and he had dug it, and plaintiff had received his injuries by falling into it. There the thing contracted to be done Avould in itself, and regardless of Massey’s care,, or the reverse, in doing it, have been the cause of the injury; and Molton too would have been liable, because that was the thing he had had Massey to do. And the same would perhaps be true, if the contract had been for Massey to dig a.’trench, lay a pipe therein and then refill it so that travel over it would be safe, and Massey had dug the trench and negligently omitted to so refill it. There too, probably, Molton would have been responsible to one injured by reason of the improperly filled trench, because Molton had had that trench (lug. But neither of those is this case. Here the injury did not result from a plank sidewalk being there— did not result from the bringing into existence of anything which Moulton had contracted to be brought into existence, viz; a properly constructed sidewalk, but from Massey’s negligence in failing to bring that thing into existence.. An analogous case would be this: a contract between Molton and Massey to macadamize the street in front of Molton’s property toan even depth [253]*253of one foot, and tlie carrying out of this undertaking by Massey for the contemplated distance, except as to one foot of the street, the result being to leave a ditch of a cubic foot in extent across the street. Now Molton did not contract with Massey to- make or leave this or any ditch in the street, but quite the contrary. The existence of the ditch, therefore, could in no sense be ascribed to Molton. Its existence at any time was beyond his intention, in contravention of his contract and subversive of the end he had in view — the betterment of the street; so entirely and patently so, indeed, that it would be absurd to sa}r that he omisod it to be there, or that an injury received by a traveler from a fall into it resulted from a. thing he had set Massey to do. That is in substance the case Ave have. The contract was to construct a plank walk across the front of Molton’s property, continuous, of a certain Avidtli and of ('ven surface', safe* and secure for pedestrians.

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

Related

J.A.P. v. L.W.A.
910 So. 2d 115 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 2004)
Bush v. JAMES T. JOHNSON AND CO.
411 So. 2d 139 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 1982)
WALTER L. COUSE & COMPANY v. Hardy Corporation
274 So. 2d 316 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 1972)
Alabama Power Company v. King
190 So. 2d 674 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1966)
Brunswick Corporation v. Sittason
167 So. 2d 126 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1964)
Pure Oil Co. v. Cooper
26 So. 2d 249 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1946)
Alabama Power Co. v. Pierre
183 So. 665 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1938)
City of Tuscaloosa v. Fair
167 So. 276 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1936)
Young v. Woodward Iron Co.
113 So. 223 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1927)
Wright-Nave Contracting Co. v. Alabama Fuel & Iron Co.
99 So. 728 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1924)
Bains v. Dank
74 So. 341 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1917)
J. C. Carland & Co. v. Burke
73 So. 10 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1916)
Sloss-Sheffield Steel & Iron Co. v. Hubbard
68 So. 571 (Alabama Court of Appeals, 1915)
Southern Railway Co. v. Lewis
51 So. 746 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
143 Ala. 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/massey-v-oates-ala-1904.