West v. Spratling

86 So. 32, 204 Ala. 478, 1920 Ala. LEXIS 240
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 10, 1920
Docket3 Div. 399.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 86 So. 32 (West v. Spratling) 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
West v. Spratling, 86 So. 32, 204 Ala. 478, 1920 Ala. LEXIS 240 (Ala. 1920).

Opinion

SOMEEVILLE, J.

[1] The only objection urged against the sufficiency of the third count of the complaint, which is based upon the alleged violation of defendant’s duty, under section 7095 of the Code, “to have securely fixed and conveniently arranged so as to be accessible to persons lodging in * * * such building, * * * good and sufficient fire escapes or ladders for each story of said building,” is that it charges that defendant’s hotel was not equipped with good and sufficient fire escapes “located securely and conveniently arranged.” Defendant’s theory is that the use of the phrase “located securely,” instead of the statutory phrase “securely fixed,” is a substantial departure therefrom, and imports a different duty. According to Worcester’s and other dictionaries, “located” means fixed, and was clearly used in that sense here. The objection is hypercritical, and cannot be sustained.

[2-5] Count 5 alleges that—

“Said hotel * * * was not properly equipped with fire escapes or ladders, said hotel [more than two stories high] being about 200 feet long and about 120 feet wide, with only one fire escape or ladder at the end of said building, about 200 feet or more from tne room occupied by plaintiff’s intestate, from which he was cut off by the fire, which was negligence.”

The criticism of this count is that it sets up, as matter of law, that one fire escape for such a building is a negligent or improper equipment, which is a question of fact for the'jury. It is, of course, a question of fact for the jury, but the fallacy of the criticism lies in the assumption that negligence or insufficiency is charged as a matter of law. On the contrary, it is charged as an inference of fact — a conclusion ideducible from the character, dimensions, and uses of the building. When facts charged are equivocal, that is, when they reasonably permit, but do not demand, the inference upon which the pleader relies, it is necessary that he should color the facts by drawing the inference in question and charging it as a fact. Norton v. Randolph, 176 Ala. 381, 58 South. 283, 40 L. R. A. (N. S.) 129, Ann. Cas. 1915A, 714; Skipper v. Holloway, 191 Ala. 190, 67 South. 991; Shelby Iron Co. v. Bierly, 202 Ala. 422, 80 South. 806; Shelby Iron Co. v. Bean, 82 South. 92. 1 Whether the facts stated may support the inference charged is a question of law for the court, and this may be tested by demurrer. Whether they do support the inference is a question of fact for the jury. As we read this count, it is,not subject to the, demurrer.

Count “A,” after describing the building somewhat more specifically, showing that it contained about 60 bedrooms and that the intestate occupied -a room on the third floor, alleges that the building “had only one fire escape for the occupants or guests of said hotel, located’ at one end of said building, a distance of, about 200 feet from the room occupied at the time of the fire by plaintiff’s intestate, and that the.fire originated in the part of the building between the room occupied by plaintiff’s intestate and the fire escape.” It then proceeds to charge a violation by defendant of section 7095 of the Code, “by lodging plaintiff’s intestate as a guest in a hotel not equipped with good and sufficient fire escapes or ladders, securely fixed and conveniently arranged, so as to be accessible to plaintiff’s intestate.”

[6-8] The same objection is made to this count as was made to count 5, and which for the same reason must be held to be without merit. It is further urged that the statement that the building had only one fire escape must be taken, on demurrer, as a concession that it was otherwise, and perhaps abundantly, equipped with fire ladders, notwithstanding the specific negation later on of any such equipment. This' contention is manifestly without merit. The allegations of the count must be construed as a1 w&ole, and not separately, and so construed the negation of the presence of ladders is positive and sufficient. Moreover, we do not think the phrase “fire escapes or ladders” was intended to describe distinct and different means or agencies,. but rather to use an enlarged description of the same thing, ex majore cautela. Certainly a fire ladder is a *482 fire escape, and “fire escapes” would include fire ladders of such sort and location as to permit the safe descent thereon of persons caught in a building on fire.

[9,10] The trial court cannot be held in error for excluding the question propounded by defendant on cross-examination to plaintiff’s witness Cox, viz.:

“While you were going into that building, and after you had gotten into the building, got near the steps and started up the steps, did not Mask ask you, ‘What number did the clerk say that Mr. Spratling was in?”’

Cox had testified that he and Mask, while the fire was in progress, went into the building looking for Spratling, and tha't he asked I-Ieaphy, the hotel clerk, where Spratling was; that according to his best recollection Heaphy said he was in room 92; that he and Mask then went into the building and were told there was no room 92; that they went back and inquired of Heaphy again, whereupon he told them Spratling was in room 68. The answer indicated by this question to Cox would have presented a statement by Mask in contradiction of certain statements made by Mask in his deposition as a witness for plaintiff. No predicate having been laid therefor, it was obviously inadmissible for that purpose. It was in no sense a part of the res gestm of any event relevant to the issues of the case, and which could be thus illustrated or explained. If, as urged, it was apt and proper to test the memory of Cox as to the events he had narrated, its allowance or rejection rested in the sound discretion of the trial court, the exercise of which will not be reviewed unless it was clearly oppressive and prejudicial. Treadwell v. State, 168 Ala. 96, 53 South. 290. We cannot so proñounce it here.

[11] The structure of the hotel and the nature of its building material were relevant to the question of the1 sufficiency of the fire escapes provided, since they might aggravate the danger of a guest’s isolation and render combustion more or less rapid,1 in case of a fire. Plaintiff was therefore prop•erly allowed to show by the witness Kline that the interior or partition walls were constructed of plaster and laths, without regard to any city ordinance on the subject. Moreover, two other witnesses had already so testified without objection from defendant.

[12,13] Whether or not the evidence established a breach of defendant’s duty under section 7095 of the Code, or of her common-law duty to seasonably warn plaintiff’s intestate, a guest of the hotel, of a danger to which she knew or should have known he was exposed by this fire, were very clearly questions of fact for the jury. Defendant insists, however, that the evidence is without any tendency to show that intestate’s death in the hotel was the proximate result of such negligence, in either aspect of the case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
86 So. 32, 204 Ala. 478, 1920 Ala. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-v-spratling-ala-1920.