National Fuel Co. v. Green

50 Colo. 307
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 15, 1911
DocketNo. 6229
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 50 Colo. 307 (National Fuel Co. v. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Fuel Co. v. Green, 50 Colo. 307 (Colo. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Gabbert

delivered the opinion of the court

This is 'an appeal by defendant from a judgment rendered in an action brought by appellee to recover damages resulting from the alleged negligence of defendant, and the negligence of one of its employees, a co-employee of plaintiff. The right of action for the alleged negligence of the co-employee was based upon the provisions of the act found in the Session Laws of 1901, page 161. The evidence disclosed that plaintiff’s spinal column was injured, which resulted in the complete paralysis of all that portion of his body .below the injury. There was a verdict and judgment in his favor, for- the sum of ten thousand dollars.

The plaintiff was in the employ of defendant, his duties being to draw cars loaded with coal from a point known as the “parting,” in an entry or passage-way in a coal mine operated by defendant, along a track leading to the bottom of a pit or shaft, and to draw empty cars from this point to- the parting. The track along which the cars were drawn from the parting had a considerable descending grade from that point.

One Leonard Wattelet was also employed by the defendant as a driver to bring cars loaded with coal along the track beyond the parting, and place them thereon. As plaintiff was going- from the pit or shaft to the. parting with a trip of empty cars, two cars loaded with coal which Wattelet was bringing along the track to the parting were lost control of by him, and instead of being stopped upon the parting, as they should have been, escaped and ran down over it, and collided with the cars which plaintiff was bringing up the entry. The injuries sustained by plaintiff were caused by this collision.

The complaint, so- far as material to consider, in [311]*311addition to alleging the foregoing facts, alleged, in substance, that it was the duty of the defendant, and in particular, the duty of its employee, Wattelet, at all times, while bringing loaded ears along the track beyond the parting, to use reasonable care, skill and diligence to keep the same under such control as would enable them to be stopped at the parting, and when the cars had reached that point, to stop the same and effectually secure them so as to prevent them from running down-and along the track leading from the parting to the bottom of the pit or shaft; that it was the duty of the defendant to use reasonable care and diligence in providing a safe place for plaintiff to work, by keeping the entry or passage-way in which he was employed free and clear from obstructions,' and in providing safe, necessary and proper appliances for stopping the loaded cars brought to the.parting; and for effectually securing'the same, so as to prevent them from being lost control of, and from running down and along the track over which plaintiff was employed to move cars; but that defendant, disregarding its duty in these respects, had negligently failed to use reasonable care and diligence in the performance of these duties; that the employee, Wattelet, while in the course of his employment, by reason of a failure on his part to exercise reasonable care, skill and diligence, negligently failed to keep a loaded car, which he was bringing along the track to the parting, under such control as to enable him to. stop it at the parting, and negligently failed to stop’ the car when it had reached the parting, and also negligently failed to secure the same effectually, so as to prevent it from running’ down and along the track over which plaintiff hauled cars, by reason of which negligence, and the negligence of defendant in the particulars above stated, the- car was lost control of by Wattelet, ran down the track, and collided with [312]*312empty cars which, plaintiff was then bringing up to the parting. The parting, as it is termed in the complaint, consisted of a side-track connecting with the main track at each end. Loaded cars brought along and over the track from beyond the parting were •stopped on the main, opposite the side, track. Empties brought up were shifted to, and stopped on, the latter.

Both parties appear to agree that the complaint was drawn upon the theory • that defendant was guilty of negligence at common law, and was also liable under the Co-Employees’ Act, above referred to.

The defendant filed a motion to require plaintiff to separately state, and separately number, in separate counts, the alleged negligence of the defendant at common law, and the alleged negligence of its employee, Wattelet, for and on account of which the plaintiff sought to hold the defendant liable. This motion was denied.

Our code provision, relating to the joinder of causes of action in the same complaint, provides that they must be separately stated. So far as a defendant is concerned, he has the undoubted right to insist that the provision requiring different causes of action united in the same complaint to be separately stated, shall be observed, and failure to sustain a motion to that effect, interposed in apt time, is prejudicial error. — Hall v. Cudahy, 46 Colo. 324. But that is not this case.

The liability of the defendant was predicated either upon its negligence, or the negligence of a fellow-servant in the employ of the defendant. The negligence of one or the other, or both, according to the averments of the complaint, if sufficient in these respects, caused the injuries for which plaintiff claimed the right to recover. In Vindicator C. G. M. Co. v. Firstbrooke, 36 Colo. 498, we held that an ac[313]*313tion for personal injuries resulting from the alleged common-law negligence of an employer, and the negligence of his employee, based upon the Co-Employees ’ Act, stating different grounds of liability for the same ultimate. act, stated but one cause of action. There is no provision of the code requiring a plaintiff to state in separate counts the several distinct matters upon which he relies to support a single cause of action; consequently, in an action for personal injuries, common-law and statutory negligence may he stated in the same count, so long as the acts upon which the plaintiff relies produced the one injury and the one damage constituting the subject-matter of the action. — White v. St. L. & M. R. R. Co., 101 S. W. (Mo.) 14. That is this case, and the motion under consideration was properly overruled.

The defendant also filed a motion to strike certain portions of the complaint, which appears to have been based upon the ground that the parts of the complaint thus attacked were mere surplusage, were not traversable, and did not state a cause of action. This motion was denied. In this ruling there was no error. A complaint must be considered as a whole. Certain averments standing alone may not state a cause of action, hut when considered in connection with other averments, they may, or do; and as the portions of the complaint attacked by the motion were proper to consider in determining whether or not the complaint stated a cause of action, the court very properly denied the motion.

The defendant also moved for an order requiring the complaint to be made more specific in the following particulars: With respect’ to providing a safe place for plaintiff to work, in keeping the entry or passage-way free and clear from obstructions, and in providing safe, proper and necessary appliances for stopping cars, as alleged in the complaint. The ground of the motion appears to be that the com[314]*314plaint did not inform the defendant as to what appliances it had failed to provide.

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Bluebook (online)
50 Colo. 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-fuel-co-v-green-colo-1911.