Sloss-Sheffield Steel & Iron Co. v. Green

49 So. 301, 159 Ala. 178, 1909 Ala. LEXIS 728
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedApril 15, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 49 So. 301 (Sloss-Sheffield Steel & Iron Co. v. Green) 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
Sloss-Sheffield Steel & Iron Co. v. Green, 49 So. 301, 159 Ala. 178, 1909 Ala. LEXIS 728 (Ala. 1909).

Opinion

DENSON, J.

This is an action by an employe against his employer to recover damages alleged as consequent upon a personal injury sustained by the employe while he was engaged in the performance of his duties, to wit, mining coal; such injury being caused by a part of the roof or top of the employer’s mine falling upon him. The case is presented by a complaint containing three counts; but the'second, having been charged out at the request of the defendant, is not before us. Indeed, it is not necessary to consider the cause in respect to any count other than the third count as amended. This count presents a cause of action under the second subdivision of section 1749 of the Code of 1896 (section 3910 of the present Code). The count ascribes the injury to the negligence of C. M. Parker whilst he was in the exercise of superintendence, in that he “negligently caused or allowed said part of said roof or top to fall upon or against plaintiff.” At the conclusion of the evidence the defendant requested, in proper form, the general affirmative charge in respect to this count, which was refused by the court.

There can be no doubt that, under the count, to support the ruling of the court refusing the charge, it is essential that the evidence be such as to afford a reasonable inference, that Parker had superintendence intrusted to him, and that the injury was caused by his negligence whilst in the exercise of such superintendence. — Drennen v. Smith, 115 Ala. 396, 22 South. 442. “To hold otherwise would be to fasten liability on the-master to the servant for that which is at most negligence of a fellow servant, having no greater power or authority than the servant who complains of the injury.” —City, etc., v. Harris, 101 Ala. 564, 570, 14 South. 357; Dantzler v. DeBardeleben, 101 Ala. 309, 16 South. 10, 22 L. R. A. 361. The testimony tends to show that C. [181]*181M. Parker ivas defendant’s “foreman, mine boss, or bank boss.” One of the witnesses — a miner in the employment of the defendant at the time of the injury— testifying in this respect, said: “Mr. Parker was the defendant’s mine foreman over us at that time.” The plaintiff testified, substantially, that he entered into the employment of the defendant on the morning of the day on Avhich he Avas injured, and that Mr. Parker, the mine boss, put him to Avork at the place where he was injured; that he had been at work only a short while Avhen a large rock fell from the roof or top of the entry upon his leg and broke it.

There Avas other testimony in the record tending to show that the rock fell from the roof of the entry. The entry, as the evidence shows, was 8 feet Avide and 5 feet 6 inches high, and extended at least 100 feet further into the mine, beyond the point where the plaintiff was put to work by the foreman. It is also shown, Avithout conflict in the evidence, that it Avas the duty of the foreman or mine boss to inspect the roof of the entry; and the evidence tends to show that, by a proper inspection prior to the time the plaintiff was put to work, the foreman could have determined Avhether or not the roof of tlie entry Aims “loose or sound, before it fell,” and, of consequence, whether or not any interference with conditions as they existed at the time and place, by mining, would probably cause any giving aAvay of the roof.

On these tendencies of the evidence found in the record, and by the light of all our cases, we feel that we are on safe ground in holding that the evidence affords a reasonable inference of superintendency intrusted to Parker over both the miners and the mine, especially touching the condition of the mine — its safety or not.— Culver v. Alabama Midland Railway Co., 108 Ala. 332, 18 South. 827; Robinson v. Tolbert, 132 Ala. 462, 31 [182]*182South. 519; Seaboard Mfg. Co. v. Woodson, 94 Ala. 143, 10 South. 87; Bessemer, etc., Co. v. Campbell, 121 Ala. 50, 61, 25 South. 793, 77 Am. St. Rep. 17. This being true, it would follow that it would be negligence for him to- “create or allow such condition of things to exist” as would “render an accident probable through the means” even “of. an intervening agency, which due care might have foreseen.” — Seaboard Mfg. Co. v. Woodson, supra; Lynch v. Allyn, 160 Mass. 248, 35 N. E. 550; Connolly v. Waltham, 156 Mass. 368, 370, 31 N. E. 302; McCauley v. Norcross, 155 Mass. 584, 30 N. E. 464; Malcolm v. Fuller, 152 Mass. 160, 25 N. E. 83; Dresser, Employer’s Liability, bottom of page 290.

We think the evidence, and tendencies of evidence, heretofore recited, sufficient to support reasonable inferences that Parker was chargeable with knowledge of the condition of the roof of the entry, or that it was his duty, in the exercise of reasonable care, to know its condition, and that he was guilty of actionable negligence, within the exercise of his superintendency, in putting the plaintiff to work at the place in question. See cases cited supra. Upon the foregoing considerations, the court holds that the affirmative charge was properly refused.

'After it was shown, without objection and without conflict in the evidence, that it was the duty of the defendant company to inspect the roof of the entry in the mine, the plaintiff sought to prove by a witness (one Mason), who was a miner in the same mine, and in the employment of the defendant, at the time of the casualty in question, that it was the duty of the foreman ot bank boss to inspect and keep up the roof of the entry, and for this purpose asked him this question. “In that coal mine whose duty was it to inspect and pimp and keep up the roof in the entry? The question was ob [183]*183jectecl to on the single ground that it called for a conclusion of the witness, and exception was reserved to the overruling by the court of the objection. We think the question called for the statement of a fact — collective facts, it may be — which, as a rule, witnesses may depose to. The presumption, from the question and the precedent testimony, is that the witness had knowledge of the fact inquired about. “If the defendant desired to know the foundation on which the witness rested his answer, he could and should have interrogated him on the subject.” By permission of the court he could have done so before the witness was allowed to answer the question; and, if his examination had revealed lack of knowledge of the fact inquired about, the court might have sustained the objection. A case very near in point, to the effect that the court did not err in overruling the objection to the question, is that of Eureka etc., Co. v. Wells, 29 Ind. App. 1, 61 N. E. 236, 94 Am. St. Rep 259, bottom of page 265. See, also, Richmond, etc., Co. v. Hammond, 93 Ala. 181, 185, 9 South. 577; Elliot v. Stocks, 67 Ala. 290, 301; Grantham v. Payne, 77 Ala. 584; McGrew v. Walker, 17 Ala. 824; First Nat. Bank v. Leland, 122 Ala. 289, 296, 25 South. 195; Street v. Sinclair, 71 Ala. 110, 116; Turnley v. Hanna, 82 Ala. 139, 144, 2 South. 483; Hood v. Disston, 90 Ala. 377, 379, 7 South. 732.

The objections to the question propounded to the witness Griffith were also properly overruled. But a different question is presented by the objections made to the testimony elicited from the witness Chambers.

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Bluebook (online)
49 So. 301, 159 Ala. 178, 1909 Ala. LEXIS 728, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sloss-sheffield-steel-iron-co-v-green-ala-1909.