Corona Coal Co. v. Hooker
Corona Coal Co. v. Hooker
Opinion of the Court
The cause of action sufficiently appears by. reference to count 1 of the complaint, which will be set out in the report of the case. The second and third counts are identical with the first, with the exception of differént dates being shown concerning the overflow on the land. The cause was tried upon the joinder of general issue upon these three counts. It is to be noted that these counts show that the stream of water known as Lost creek flows through the plaintiff’s land, and that coal dust and other debris from defendant’s mine and coal washer were not placed directly into Lost creek by the defendant, but into a nearby stream, leading from the defendant’s mines, flowing into Lost creek.
Tutwiler Coal, etc., Co. v. Nichols, supra; Savannah, etc., Ry. Co. v. Buford, 106 Ala. 303, 17 South. 395; Lindsey v. So. Rwy. Co., 149 Ala. 349, 43 South. 139; Harris v. Randolph Lbr. Co., 175 Ala. 148, 57 South. 453; Alabama Western Ry. Co. v. Wilson, 1 Ala. App. 306, 55 South. 932. In the Buford Case, supra, it was held that the averments of the complaint in regard to negligence should be rejected as mere surplusage, which language is quoted in Lindsey v. So. Rwy. Co., supra, where it was again held that the averment of negligence was unnecessary. The words “negligence” and “negligently,” found in the last paragraphs of the complaint, therefore, constitute surplusage, which need not be proven. Speaking to this question this court, in Prestwood v. McGowan, 148 Ala. 475, 41 South. 779, said:
“Greenleaf states that ‘surplusage need not be proved,’ and that ‘the term “surplusage” comprehends whatever may be stricken from the record without destroying the plaintiff’s right of action; as if, for example, in suing the defendant for a breach of warranty upon the sale of goods, he should set forth, not only that the goods were not such as the defendant warranted them -to be, hut that the defendant well knew that they were not.’ 1 Greenleaf on Evidence (15th Ed.) § 51. And he defines 'a variance to be ‘a disagreement between the allegation and the proof, in some matter which, in point of law, is essential to the charge or claim, * * * or to have become so by being inseparably connected, by the mode of statement with that which is essential.’ ”
The case of A. G. S. R. R. Co. v. McFarlin, 174 Ala. 637, 56 South. 989, and authorities there cited, clearly demonstrate there was no fatal variance. The affirmative charge was therefore properly refused. Of course, it is recognized that negligence may be cohstitut *223 ed a material part of tlie complaint, and this court so construed the last count of the complaint in Ala. Fuel & Iron Co. v. Vaughn, 203 Ala. 461, 83 South. 323.
Appellant’s counsel lays much stress on the recent ease of Jones v. Tenn. Coal & Iron Co., 202 Ala. 381, 80 South. 463; but the question here considered was not there presented. The substance of the holding is found stated in the language of the opinion, which pointed out that every issue presented by the evidence was submitted to the jury under counts 1 and 2, charging the maintenance of a nuisance.
AYe find no reversible error in the record, and the judgment appealed from will accordingly be affirmed.
Affirmed.
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