Tennessee Valley Sand & Gravel Co. v. Pilling

47 So. 2d 236, 35 Ala. App. 237, 1950 Ala. App. LEXIS 391
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 7, 1950
Docket8 Div. 823
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 47 So. 2d 236 (Tennessee Valley Sand & Gravel Co. v. Pilling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tennessee Valley Sand & Gravel Co. v. Pilling, 47 So. 2d 236, 35 Ala. App. 237, 1950 Ala. App. LEXIS 391 (Ala. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

*241 CARR, Judge.

Mrs. Hattie Pilling and F. H. McGuire each brought suit against the Tennessee Valley Sand and Gravel Company, a corporation. By agreement the two cases were consolidated for trial and submitted to one jury. In the court below there was a verdict and judgment in favor of each plaintiff.

The appeals in both cases are before this court, but are presented by separate records. Identical questions are submitted for our review by both records and briefs of counsel.

Mrs. Pilling and Mr. McGuire are adjoining landowners, each owning a forty-acre farm. The appellant owns lands north and east of these farms. The locations of the properties of the litigants and the flow of Little Bear Creek are such that appellees are lower riparian owners.

The appellant operates a sand and gravel pit and plant on a site located on its lands. The plaintiffs base their claim for damages to their lands on the alleged negligent operation of the defendant’s plant.

In reviewing the assignments of error, we will adhere to the rule that if kindred questions are not presented and assignments are argued in brief in groups, if one is without merit, a consideration of the others may be pretermitted. Buffalo Rock Co. v. Davis, 228 Ala. 603, 154 So. 556; Moseley v. Alabama Power Co., 246 Ala. 416, 21 So.2d 305; Christ v. Spizman, 33 Ala.App. 586, 35 So.2d 568; Ray v. Terry et al., 32 Ala.App. 582, 28 So.2d 916.

Assignment No. 1

“The Court committed error in overruling the demurrers of the Defendant to the complaint.”

Appellant presses three positions under this assignment:

(1) “3. The complaint fails to allege that the Defendant has breached any duty owing by the Defendant to the Plaintiff.”
(2) “5. The complaint fails to allege any causal connection between the operation of the Defendant’s plant or mining operations and the overflowing of the creek on the lands of the Plaintiff.”
(3) “13. The complaint fails to allege that the negligent or wrongful conduct of the defendant’s agents, servants, or employees was performed by them while acting in the line and scope of their employment as such.”

We will point out some rules of pleading which have application to the indicated contentions.

“When the averred facts show the relation of the parties and duty in the premises, a breach thereof may be pleaded by way of conclusion (Alabama Fuel & Iron Co. v. Bush, 204 Ala. 658, 86 So. 541; Mobile Light & R. Co. v. Ellis, 209 Ala. 580, 96 So. 773), and, when the facts are alleged out of which a duty arises, the pleading need not charge the conclusion that the duty existed. Maddox v. Jones, *242 205 Ala. 598, 89 So. 38.” Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Robinson, 213 Ala. 522, 105 So. 874, 875.

“A cause of action is made up of a duty and its breach. The duty—the relationship from which the duty springs— must be shown by the facts alleged; and the breach of the duty may be averred by way of a conclusion.” Alabama Fuel & Iron Co. v. Bush, 204 Ala. 658, 86 So. 541, 542.

"In actions of tort, when, in the complaint, the duty to act is shown, the negligent performance of that duty may be alleged in the complaint in the most general terms.” Sloss-Sheffield Steel & Iron Co. v. Prosch et al., 190 Ala. 290, 67 So. 516, 518.

“A simple negligence count of a complaint relying on the negligence of street railway employe, alleging that ‘defendant’s servants, agents, or employes in control or operating one of defendant’s cars aforesaid over and along said railway,’ negligently operated the same so as to cause the injury complained of, when construed with other allegations of defendant’s ownership and operation of the railway at the place of injury, held to ■ sufficiently allege that defendant's employes 'were acting within the scope of their employment.” Alabama Power Co. v. Stogner, 208 Ala. 666, 95 So. 151.

In the case at bar the complaint, in pertinent parts for this review, alleges:

“Plaintiff’s said tract is devoted to farming uses, and said stream flows through plaintiff’s pasture.. The defendant owns land along the upper reaches and tributaries of said creek, above the lands of the plaintiff, on which it conducts mining or sand and gravel digging operations, and has so conducted the same for more than one year prior to the bringing of this suit.
“The plaintiff alleges that the agents, servants or employees of the defendant in charge of its said mining or digging operations have so negligently or wrongfully conducted the same as to cause the stream bed'to be filled with muck dr debris from the mining operations, thereby constituting an entrapment and danger to domestic animals; as to cause the creek to overflow repeatedly, thereby permanently depositing muck and debris from the mining operations on the lands of plaintiff and thereby damaging and rendering valueless much land of the plaintiff formerly valuable, to-wit; * * *
“And the plaintiff alleges that her said injuries were the proximate consequence of the negligence or wrongfulness of defendant’s agents, servants or employees, as aforesaid and that the same were to her damage in the sum of Money as aforesaid, wherefore she sues.”

The recited averments of the complaint illustrate our view that the pleader adhered to the rules which are followed by our courts, or at least to the substantial extent that the complaint is not subject to the incompleteness and deficiency which the demurrers seek to point out.

The appellate courts of this State apply the rule which provides that any error in overruling demurrers to a complaint is rendered harmless to the defendant by undisputed proof of the omitted averments. Smith v. Tripp, 246 Ala. 421, 20 So.2d 870; Britling Cafeteria Co. v. Irwin, 229 Ala. 687, 159 So. 228; Birmingham Water Works Co. v. Barksdale, 227 Ala. 354, 150 So. 139; Ridgely Operating Co. v. White, 227 Ala. 459, 150 So. 693; Fagan Peel Co. v. Harrison Co., 16 Ala.App. 470, 79 So. 144.

The above rule is without application if the complaint is so drawn that it does not state a cause of action. John E. Ballenger Const. Co. v. Joe F. Walters Const. Co., 236 Ala. 548, 184 So. 275.

Assignments Nos. 2 and 3

Assignment No. 2 seeks our review on the action of the court in over-, ruling an objection to a question to one of appellee’s witnesses. The question was not answered. Kelley v. State, 32 Ala.App. 408, 26 So.2d 633; Malone v. State, 16 Ala.App. 185, 76 So. 469.

*243 Assignment No. 4

A witness was asked: “Approximately how many times has it (Little Bear Creek) overflowed in the past fifteen months?” Appellant’s objections were overruled. The witness did not answer. The question was restated with slight variation. Without further objections the witness replied: “I don’t know. I never kept up with it, but it has overflowed two or three times anyway.”

Objections should have been reinterposed to the second question.

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Tennessee Valley Sand & Gravel Co. v. Pilling
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Bluebook (online)
47 So. 2d 236, 35 Ala. App. 237, 1950 Ala. App. LEXIS 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tennessee-valley-sand-gravel-co-v-pilling-alactapp-1950.