Waters v. Anthony

40 So. 2d 316, 252 Ala. 244, 1949 Ala. LEXIS 402
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMarch 17, 1949
Docket6 Div. 737.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 40 So. 2d 316 (Waters v. Anthony) 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
Waters v. Anthony, 40 So. 2d 316, 252 Ala. 244, 1949 Ala. LEXIS 402 (Ala. 1949).

Opinion

*247 FOSTER, Justice.

Plaintiff recovered a judgment against both defendants, Waters and Lackey, for personal injuries she is alleged to have'sustained as a patron of a moving picture show-owned by defendant Waters and managed by defendant Lackey. She claims that the seat she. undertook to occupy.'ha<i no bottom, and that in sitting she sat down on the floor without being prevented by the seat. She claimed not that it was defective and fell with her weight, or that it was turned up, but that it was not there. The complaint charged negligence of defendants in and about furnishing plaintiff with a defective seat.

The defense was that there was no such defect, that Lackey was not liable because, as such agent of Waters, he merely omitted to act at most, and owed plaintiff no duty to act, and should have had the affirmative charge, and no neglect of duty was chargeable to Waters, as contributory negligence.

Assignment of Error No. 1.

This assignment is predicated on the refusal to give charge No. 15. But the record shows that charge No. 15 was given. The argument is as though charge 10-A was thus assigned. But it does not so appear.

Assignment of Error No. 2.

This assignment is based on the refusal * of charge 12-A in the light of the giving of charge 15. This again is argued as though the refusal was of charge 10-A, which is not assigned as error. But charge 12-A is in the exact language of charge 12 which was given.

In respect to all such charges their giving or refusal is usually held not to be reversible error. Nelson v. Lee, 249 Ala. 549, 32 So.2d 22; Roberts v. McCall, 245 Ala. 359, 17 So.2d 159; Alabama Power Co. v. Elmore, 222 Ala. 6, 130 So. 413, 415; Brasfield v. Hood, 221 Ala. 240, 128 So. 433; Smith v. Crenshaw, 220 Ala. 510, 126 So. 127.

Appellant’s argument is that as charge 15 was given for the benefit of Lackey, a similar one, No. 10-A not 12-A as specified in the assignment, ought to have been given for Waters. But we do not think that status, -had it been properly presented, was reversible error, or could have misled the jury to the prejudice of Waters in the light of the giving of charges 12 and 16, applicable to both defendants. The fact that those charges use the,word “caused,” whereas charge No. ¡ 10-A used the word “contributed,” should *248 not serve to reflect upon that conclusion. Abstractly speaking, there was no error in refusing charge 10-A, nor did it serve, we think, to prejudice the jury against Waters, in the light of charges 12 and 16.

Assignment of Error. No. 4.

The suit is for damages against the defendants as operators of a picture show, occurring on Thursday the 15th day of August, 1944, in which plaintiff claimed that she was ■ injured in trying to take a seat on a chair about .one-third down the right tier of seats, but that there was no seat in the chair, and she fell to the floor seriously injuring her spine.

Over the objection of defendant, plaintiff proved by the witness Watson that on Monday or Tuesday of the same week, he carried his children to the same theater and went in with them to place them, and not half way down in the same tier of seats one of the children fell through a seat, and there was no bottom to it. He then moved down to another place. The objection was that it does not appear to have been at the same place where plaintiff fell, the time is different, and on the general grounds.

The argument is that since the issue is whether the place where plaintiff undertook to sit was reasonably safe for that purpose, evidence of prior accidents is not admissible, especially if they were at a different place.

But the jury could find from the circumstances that the place to which Watson testified was the same as that here involved. If they find it to be so, evidence of a previous accident there within a reasonably short time before that in question is admissible. City of Birmingham v. Levens, 241 Ala. 47, 200 So. 888.

But it was not so much the matter of another accident as the fact that at another time, a few days before, others had found a seat in such defective condition, was material on the disputed issue. Especially is this true after defendant had introduced evidence tending to show that no such conditions existed at any time in the theater. Such evidence, though produced after Watson testified, tended to fix his evidence as legal and not subject to objection. We do not think there was reversible error in respect to this evidence of the witness Watson.

Assignments of Error 5 and 6.

Assignment No. 5 is the affirmative charge as to defendant Lackey. No 6 is the affirmative charge for defendants, meaning both of them. The defendant Lackey was the manager of the theater and ran it, but had no interest in it otherwise. Defendant Waters was the sole owner of the theater and its equipment, though not of the building. He did not have anything to do with the inspection of it, but employed his father N. H. Waters, Sr., doing business as Waters Theater Company (a trade name) to operate the business, with Lackey as the manager. The defendant Waters made no inspection of the equipment. His father and brother, N. H. Waters, Sr., and Jr., did all that as his employees. But defendant Waters’ job was to book the pictures for the theater.

The one count on which the suit was tried charged the defendants J. R. Waters and Lackey as operating the theater, and negligence in doing so. But such allegations charging joint operation are sufficient to embrace a relation of master and servant in respect to the two defendants where the claim is in case for negligence, and though the negligence is directly attributed to the servant, with the liability of the master dependent upon the principle of respondeat superior. Of course a judgment exonerating the servant would relieve the master when that is the only basis of liability, otherwise the judgment may be against one defendant and in favor of the other. Title 7, section 139, Code; Brooks v. City of Birmingham, 239 Ala. 172 (2.and 3), 194 So. 525; Griffin v. Bozeman, 234 Ala. 136, 173 So. 857; Southern Railway v. Lockridge, 222 Ala. 15, 130 So. 557; Walker v. St. L. & S. F. R. R., 214 Ala. 492, 108 So. 388; Supreme Lodge v. Custin, 202 Ala. 246, 80 So. 84.

Appellant again raises a question, which we have repeatedly treated, and ruled against his contention. It is that Lackey is not responsible to plaintiff for his omissions, since his only duty as to them was to his employer. We have declared the theory to be that if Lackey omits to enter upon a discharge of his duties as manager, *249 his breach is only .with reference to Waters, his employer. But if he does enter upon it, and while so doing he is negligent in its performance, either by doing a wrongful act or by neglecting to do what he should have done in the exercise of due care, the duty which he breached is not alone that due to his employer, but also to an invitee who is proximately injured thereby. Southeastern Greyhound Lines v. Callahan, 244 Ala. 449, 13 So.2d 660; Sloss Sheffield Steel & Iron Co. v. Wilkes, 231 Ala. 511, 165 So. 764, 109 A.L.R. 385, and other cases there cited.

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Bluebook (online)
40 So. 2d 316, 252 Ala. 244, 1949 Ala. LEXIS 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waters-v-anthony-ala-1949.