Southern Cotton Oil Co. v. Woods
Southern Cotton Oil Co. v. Woods
Opinion of the Court
The action was by an employs against his employer to recover damages for personal injuries. The complaint was based on our Employers’ Liability Act.
The only negligence alleged or relied upon was that imputed to the employer’s superintendent under the second subdivision of the statute (section 3910 of the Code). The particular negligence charged to this superintendent was his failure to warn plaintiff that he had connected a belt with a certain pulley operating the spike roller, a part of a cotton gin, and certain other parts of the machinery of the gin at which plaintiff was at work at the time in guest-ion, with the result that plaintiff’s hand was caught by the spikes of the roller and severely mangled. The alleged specific negligence is set up in one of the counts as follows:
“Plaintiff avers that the injury that he sustained was the direct and proximate result of the negligence of the said Walter C. Carter, who was at said time in the service or employment of the defendant, and was then and there intrusted with the superintendence of the operation of said gins, and while in the exercise of such superintendence, in failing to inform him that he had connected the belt that was on said spike roller with the pulley that gave the machinery motion, and that said spike roller was then, in motion. Wherefore he sues.”
The defendant demurred to each count of the complaint. The demurrers were sustained as to each count of the original complaint, but were overruled as to each count of the amended complaint. The amendment consisted of two new or additional counts, numbered 3 and 4.
“In our most recent case of the sort we held in respect to a similar count that, though it followed the language of the statute, it was subject to demurrer, because it failed to point out, even in general terms, any act of negligence on the part of the alleged superintendent with respect to his duty while so engaged. Maddox v. Chilton Warehouse Co., 171 Ala. 216, 55 South. 93. In Bear Creek Mill Co. v. Parker, 134 Ala. 293, 32 South. 700, the fifth count of the complaint there under consideration, after alleging preliminary matter about which there was no question, showed plaintiff’s injuries, and that they resulted from plaintiff being caught between two cars of the defendant.”
. “A complaint under the Employers’ Liability Act should, in respect of certainty, conform to those rules which under our system apply to pleadings generally. Those rules permit the averment of conclusions, but conclusions when employed must ordinarily be accompanied with averments of fact whereon issues can be understood, joined and tried. L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Jones, 130 Ala. 470, 30 South. 586, citing Leach v. Bush, 57 Ala. 145, upon which have been planted all those numerous cases in which great generality in the averment of negligence has been accepted as meeting the requirements of good pleading. Certainty to a common intent in pleading is essential to the due administration of justice, and it cannot be abolished.”
“How easy it is for a corporation or an individual that employed men to have a set of technical rules by which it should be governed, and still let them go on and do the work in a different manner, and then go to the courthouse here and make defense in a different manner.”
While it is true, as counsel for appellant argues, that there was no evidence in this case of any specific rules made by this defendant, there was evidence of certain instructions to plaintiff and others as to how to operate the gin and how to unchoke it, and as to whether or not the hand could be inserted in the gin when the roller was on and when; off, and with or without lifting the breast of the gin, or by the use of a certain button, and of cautio-nings as to other dangers attending the operation of the gin; though there was some conflict in the evidence as to these matters. Eor this reason we are not prepared to say that the argument was wholly improper, or that the failure to exclude it was reversible error. The argument here complained of was nothing like as objectionable as that used in Drennen’s Case, 175 Ala. 338, 57 South. 876, Ann. Cas. 19140, 1037, or in Field’s Case, 104 Ala. 471, 16 South. 538, or in Wolffe’s Case, 74 Ala. 386, or in the other cases cited by counsel for appellant, in which the judgment was reversed for the failure to exclude it on motion.
The defendant was certainly not entitled to the affirmative charge in this case.
Affirmed.
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