Stowers v. Dwight Mfg. Co.
Stowers v. Dwight Mfg. Co.
Opinion of the Court
The action is brought under the second and third subdivisions of the Employers’ Liability Act (section 3910 of the Code), to recover damages of the master for personal injuries to the servant. The trial was had on the general issue and the contributory negligence of the plaintiff, and the court gave the affirmative charge for the defendant. Plaintiff appeals.
The whole of the evidence is set out in the transcript and in the brief of counsel for appellant.
At common law, when a right is conferred, and a corresponding duty imposed, upon a person, he is answerable to another person who sustains damage by the negligent discharge of such duty. Negligence is nothing more than a failure to discharge the duty resting upon one under the circumstances of the case. Mann v. Central Vt. R. Co., 55 Vt. 484, 45 Am. Rep. 628; Young v. Detroit, G. H. & M. Ry. Co., 56 Mich. 435, 23 N. W. 67.
“If the wrong and legal damages are not known by common experience to be usually in sequence, and the damage does not, according to the ordinary course of events, follow from the wrong, and the wrong and the damage are not sufficiently conjoined or concatenated, as cause and effect, to sustain the action.”
Similarly Baron Pollock states the rule in these words:
“A person is expected to anticipate and guard against all reasonable consequences, but he is not, by the law of England, expected to anticipate against that which no reasonable man would expect to occur.”
The legal principle is thus stated by Mr. Justice Dixon, in Wiley v. West Jersey R. Co., 44 N. J. Law, 251:
“The rule of law requires that the damages chargeable to a wrongdoer must be shown to be the natural and proximate effects of his delinquency. The term ‘natural’ imports that they are such as might reasonably have been foreseen such as occur in an ordinary state of things. The term ‘proximate’ indicates that there must be no other culpable and efficient agency intervening between the defendant’s dereliction and the loss.” Board of Chosen Freeholders of Morris County v. Hough, 55 N. J. Law, 649, 651, 28 Atl. 86.
“In every case involving negligence there are necessarily three elements essential to its existence: (1) The existence of a duty on the part of the defendant to protect the plaintiff from injury; (2) failure of defendant to perform that duty; and (3) injury to plaintiff from such failure of defendant. When these elements are brought together, they unitedly constitute actionable negligence.” 25 Cyc. 419.
The principle announced above has been applied by this court in Birmingham R. Light & Power Co. v. Jones, 153 Ala. 157, 45 South. 177, following the decision in Southern R. Co. v. Williams, 143 Ala. 212, 38 South. 1013, we said:
“Actionable negligence being a failure to discharge a legal duty to the person injured, if there is no duty there is no negligence. And even if the defendant owed the duty to keep a lookout for persons rightfully on the track, hut owed none to the plaintiff because she was a trespasser, no action will lie, for the duty must be to the person injured.” Sou. Ry. Co. v. Drake, 166 Ala. 544, 545, 51 South. 997.
Applying these principles to the ease in hand, we feel sure that the trial court ruled correctly. If, however, we should be in error as to this, the evidence without dispute showed that plaintiff was guilty of negligence without which the injury would not have happened, and which therefore proximately caused his damages.
. It results that the judgment appealed from must be affirmed
Affirmed.
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