Tallassee Falls Mfg. Co. v. Taunton
Tallassee Falls Mfg. Co. v. Taunton
Opinion of the Court
The complaint is in five counts. Counts 1, 2, and 3 claim for a breach of duty under subdivision 1 of section 3910 of the Code of 1907, and count 4 claims under subdivision 2 of the same section, and count 5 claims for a breach of duty in failing to furnish plaintiff with a safe place in which to work.
“That the plaintiff, while engaged in the employ of tlie defendant company and while acting within the scope of his employment, and while doing what was required of him by the superior officers of the defendant company, was going down said inclined way or walk leading from the waste room in said cotton mill into the shoddy room, and, as a proximate consequence thereof, slipped and fell,” etc.
This cannot be taken as an allegation that the negligence of the superintendent was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury, and hence the demurrer raising this point should have been sustained.
The same reasoning is applicable to the fifth count of the complaint, that count failing to allege that the steep, slick, smooth, worn, and dangerous walk was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury. Notwithstanding the great latitude recognized in our decisions with regard to allegations of negligence, the appellate courts have never gone to the extent of permitting allegations which admit of uncertainty and duplicity. The demurrer to count 5 should have been sustained.
The two questions raised upon the admissibility of testimony will probably not arise upon another trial -of this case, and hence we do not pass upon them.
The court, in its oral charge, charged the jury as follows:
“The defendant says that this money, under this agreement, was received by the plaintiff, and that he had not returned it, and if he was going back upon the agreement that he made to release the company then he must return the money he received under that agreement — under the old theory that a pian cannot eat his cake and have it too — if he is going against the contract, he must return the money under the contract. The plaintiff in answer to that says— and that is a question for you to determine also —he says that this money was not received by me, the plaintiff, under this contract of release, because I never knew of any contract of release. This money was paid to me by the company for making a settlement of what I would be satisfied to receive, the wages that I did not earn on account of my injury; they stated that that money was paid to me on that account if I signed this notification to the company, and it was not the consideration' for entering into that contract. That brings up another question of fact for you to determine as to what the facts are in reference to what that agreement was.
“Now the damages in this case are not what is called punitive or exemplary damages. They are damages by way of compensation merely, and the damage you would be authorized to allow would be the doctor’s bills, medicine bills, the loss of time, and such sum as you might think that you ought to give as a reasonable compensation for the injury, for the pain and suffering, taking into account whether- or not the injury is of a permanent character.”
For the errors pointed out, the judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.*
Reference
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- Tallassee Falls Mfg. Co. v. Taunton.
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