Alabama Court of Appeals, 1913

Sloss-Sheffield Steel & Iron Co. v. Rohue

Sloss-Sheffield Steel & Iron Co. v. Rohue
Alabama Court of Appeals · Decided June 3, 1913 · Walker
8 Ala. App. 623; 62 So. 967; 1913 Ala. App. LEXIS 232

Sloss-Sheffield Steel & Iron Co. v. Rohue

Opinion of the Court

WALKER', P. J.

— In the count of the compalint upon which the case went to the jury the injuries complained of were alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff, while he was in .the discharge of his duties as an employee of the defendant, in consequence of the breaking loose of some coal ears which, by means of a cable or rope, were being hoisted out of a mine operated by the defendant; and the fact that the plaintiff was subjected to the injuries was attributed to a defect in *625the condition of the ways, works, machinery, or plant, connected with or used in the business of the defendant, which arose from, or had not been remedied owing to, the negligence of the defendant, or of some person in the service or employment of the defendant, and intrusted by it with the.duty of seeing that its ways, works, machinery, or plant were in proper condition, in that the links of the chain that coupled said cars together were defective, in that they were not of sufficient strength for the purposes for Avhich they were being used at the time of the accident.

Written charges 5 and 7, requested by the defendant, were properly refused, as each of them required the rendition of a verdict in favor of the defendant if the jury found from the evidence that the break which occurred in a link of the chain which coupled the cars together was not due to the negligence of the defendant itself, though there was evidence tending to prove that the defect in the link arose from, or had not been discovered or remedied owing to, the negligence of some employee of the defendant who had been intrusted by it with the duty of seeing that the cable or chain was in proper condition. These charges ignored one of the issues in the case.

Substantially, if not identically, the same state of facts which, in written charge 4 refused to the defendant, was made the predicate for an instruction to the jury to return a verdict for the defendant was, in charges given at its instance, made the predicate for instructions to the effect that the jury could not find in favor of the plaintiff. Acting under these latter instructions, the jury rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff. This imports a finding by them of the nonexistence of the state of facts hypothesized. So there is no room for any other conclusion in this connection *626than that, if the same state of facts had been stated to the jury as a hypothesis for the rendition by them of a verdict for the defendant, the result must still have been a verdict for the plaintiff. Conceding that, because of the difference in form, there was a difference in effect between the charge refused and those given, yet the appellant cannot be entitled to a reversal the only excuse for which would be to afford it an opportunity again to submit to a jury the substantially identical question of fact which was distinctly passed on by the verdict upon which the judgment appealed from was based. For the purposes of this case that verdict established it as a fact that the links of the couplings on defendant’s cars were not sufficiently strong for the purposes in which they were employed, when properly coupled together. The record shows that the appellant, under other instructions given at its instance, had the benefit of the submission to the jury of the question which, by its written charge 4, it sought to have presented to them; and it is not entitled to have that question passed, on again.

What has been said disposes of the only assignments of error which have been insisted on.

Affirmed.

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