Tennessee Coal, Iron & Railroad v. Barker

PER CURIAM.

The appellee Avas a servant of appellant, and while engaged in the performance of the. duties of his employment Avas injured by the fall of a wall. One Bryant was also an employee of appellant, *417and had superintendence over the work in which appellee was engaged at the time of appellee’s injuries; and the complaint alleges that appellee’s injuries were due to an act of negligence of said Bryant while in the exercise of such superintendence, and Avhile acting Avithin the line of his employment.

1. The sufficiency of counts A, B, and C, Avhich the reporter Avill set out in his summary of the facts of the case, Avas challenged by demurrer.

Each of the above counts shows that appellee Avas in the service or employment of appellant, and that the injuries complained of Avere received by him while he was engaged in the service of appellant under his employment, and Avhile acting Avithin the line of his employment. The facts, therefore, set out in each of the above counts show that, at the time of the injury complained of, the appellant owed a duty to appellee, viz., the duty which under the laAV, the master OAves the servant. As the complaint plainly shoAvs, by its allegations of fact, the duty on the part of appellant to act, it Avas sufficient for the pleader, in preparing the complaint, to state by a mere general averment that appellant negligently failed to do or perform that duty. In cases of this sort it is essential, AAThen the sufficiency of the complaint is tested by demurrer, for the complaint to set out the facts from which the laAV will declare the alleged' duty. It is not necessary for the complaint to set out the facts showing the failure to perform the duty, as the failure to perform the duty may be stated in general terms. — 14 Ency. Pl. & Pr. 331; T. C., I. & R. R. Co. v. Smith, 171 Ala. 251, 55 South. 170; Southern Ry. Co. v. Burgess, 143 Ala. 364, 42 South. 35.

It was, of course, unnecessary for the counts under consideration, by any of their averments, to negative the contributory- negligence of the appellee. Con-*418tributary negligence, to be available as a defense to an action for damages for simple negligence, must be pleaded. — Broslin v. K. C., M. & B. R. Co., 114 Ala. 398, 21 South. 475. In our opinion, therefore, the counts were not subject to appellant’s demurrer.

2. The appellant, before the jury retired, requested the trial court, in writing, in the manner provided by law, to give to the jury several charges, among them charge 8, which the reporter will set out in his statement of the case. With reference to these charges, the bill of exceptions .contains the following statement: “The foregoing charges, requested by the defendant and refused by the court, were written out and handed.to the court during the argument of the case. During the argument of the case, the court wrote on said charges 'Refused, signing his name thereto, and handed them to the clerk. At the conclusion of the argument, counsel for the plaintiff announced that he would withdraw the counts of the complaint Nos. 1, 2, 3, and 4. The refused charges referred to were not presented to the court after the amendment of the complaint.”

The complaint was amended by the addition of counts A, B, and C, which we have referred to in section 1 of this opinion, and by the withdrawal of all the other counts of the complaint. Each of the counts of the complaint which was Avithdrawn, viz., counts 1, 2, 3, and 4, claimed damages of appellant because of an alleged act of negligence of one William Bryant, Avho had superintendence intrusted to him, and for an alleged act of negligence of William Bryant only.

It is contended by appellee that, as the written charges Avhich were requested by appellant, and which were refused by the court, were actually marked “Refused” by the presiding judge, and handed by him to the clerk before the amendment of the complaint was *419moved for or allowed, and as all of the counts then in the- complaint were withdrawn by the allowance of the amendment and entirely new counts added, and as the appellant did not, after the allowance of the amendment, again request the court to give the charges to the jury, therefore appellant should not be permitted to complain of the refusal of the trial court to give said charges to the jury, or either of them. The above argument of appellee is plainly fallacious for two reasons:

First. The amendment of the complaint related back to the commencement of the suit. The amendment was' within the lis pendens of the original complaint. — Code, § 536-370; Central of Ga. Ry. Co. v. Sturgis, 159 Ala. 222, 48 South. 810; 6 Mayfield’s Dig. p. 713, § 67.

A charge which a party to a suit may, in writing, request a court to give to a jury is not a pleading, and the rule requiring pleadings to be refiled after the allowance of an amendment to a complaint (see Syson Co. v. Dickens, 146 Ala. 471, 40 South. 753) has no application to charges requested by either party in writing. In fact appellant, in presenting the charges to the court during the argument of the case, instead of after the argument was concluded, acted with .greater fairness to the court and to appellee than would have been the case if the charges had been presented to the court after the conclusion of the argument. The trial judge was thus given more time within which to consider the charges than he would have had if they had been handed to him at a later stage of the trial. Appellant did not move for or obtain the amendment, and when, in compliance with the terms of the statute, its counsel requested the trial judge to give the charges to which we refer to the jury, its duty, in that particular, was performed. It then became the duty of the court — not during the ar*420gument of the case, but when the case was given in charge to the jury — to give or refuse to give those charges to the jury in the terms in which they were written. — Code 1907, § 5364. Appellant cannot be held answerable for the action of the trial judge in marking the charges “Refused,” and handing them to the clerk during the argument.

Second. In addition to the above, the only charge which the court refused to give, at the written request of appellant which is pressed upon us for our consideration is written charge 8; and if that charge correctly states the law of this case after the amendment it correctly stated it before the amendment was allowed.

3. Undoubtedly charge 8, requested in writing by appellant, contains a correct and succinct statement of the law as applied to the facts of this case. Appellee was a member of a gang of laborers engaged, at the time he received his injuries, in tearing down a wall of appellant. Bryant was the foreman of this gang of laborers. He was intrusted by appellant with superintendence over the work, had the authority to direct how the work should be done, and appellee owed obedience to his orders. Appellee confessedly sustained a broken leg while in said employment of appellant, and while performing the duties under that employment, by the fall of a wall. He was, when he sustained his injuries, where Bryant directed him to be, and was engaged in performing the work which Bryant directed him to do. It is not and cannot, under the facts and under the pleadings in this case, be contended that appellant is liable for appellee’s injuries, unless those injuries were proximately caused by the negligence of Bryant. Charge 8 presented the only issue as to the liability vel non of appellant in a clear-cut way to the jury. In fact, there is no contention in appellee’s excellent *421brief that the law of this case, as it went to the jury under the pleadings and evidence, is not fairly presented by .said charge. The only real question in this case is whether charge 8 ivas fully .or substantially covered by other requested instructions which, at the written request of appellant, the trial judge gave to the jury. If so, then the trial court ivas free from error in refusing" the charge; and if not it ivas not. — Boyd v. State, 154 Ala. 9, 45 South. 634; 6 Mayfield’s Dig. p. 114, § 47.

4. The only charge which ivas 'given to the jnry by the trial court, which can truthfully be said to approach, in similarity, the charge now under consideration, is written charge 10, which the reporter will set out in his report of this case.

Every word in a charge which is given by a trial court to a jury at the written request of a party do the cause should mean something. Such a charge should correctly,, succinctly, and plainly state the law as applied to the facts of the case. Such a charge is intended, not for lawyers, who are accustomed to drawing nice distinctions, but for laymen, who are not. Written charges, when given to a jury, are important; and, while it is said that jurors sometimes do not consider them, they should do so. They constitute at least a part of the law of the case submitted to them for their determination under the la.AV, and a jury cannot be expected to do exact justice as triers of the facts, unless its members fully understand the laAV governing those facts. When, under a Avritten (or oral) charge, a verdict for either party is hypothesized upon the finding" by the jury of a certain state of facts, it is essential that the jnry shall find all the facts to exist as hypothesized in the charge, in order for that jury to truthfully rest its verdict upon that charge. Charge 10, in substance, instructed the jury that if they believed from the evi*422dence “that the fall of the wall was unexpected by Bryant mid the crew working with him,” and that the appellee’s injuries were not proximately caused by the negligence of Bryant, then their verdict should be for appellant. In other Avords, the charge instructed the jury that if neither Bryant nor the members of the crew working with him expected the wall to fall, and if Bryant was guilty of no negligence, then the verdict of the jury should be for appellant. Bryant’s lack of negligence is not the only fact hypothesized in charge 10 as a basis for a verdict in appellant’s favor. Bryant’s lack of negligence and the unexpected fall of the wall by the members of the crew working under Bryant are the two facts which, under charge 10, must ■ be affirmatively found to exist by the jury to authorize a verdict for appellant. Under the terms of charge 10, if the jury were reasonably in doubt or uncertain as to whether the fall of the wall Avas unexpected by Bryant and the crew working Avi'th him, and that the appellee’s injuries were received through a negligent act of Bryant, then they were not authorized to find for appellant. Under charge 8 the jury Avas instructed that, unless they affirmatively find from the evidence that Bryant was guilty of negligence, then the jury must find for appellant. In charge 10 the burden of proof is not properly placed, while in charge 8 it is properly placed. In charge 8 the jury, to authorize a verdict for appellee, are required to find affirmatively that Bryant was negligent, and only that fact. Under charge 10, to authorize a verdict for appellant, they are required to find affirmatively that the fall of the wall was unexpected by Bryant and his crew, and that Bryant was not, negligent. The two charges are not identical in meaning, and it cannot be truthfully said that charge 8 was substantially covered by charge 10. As we have already said, charge 8 was, as *423applied to the evidence in this case, a correct statement of the law. The Legislature - of Alabama, by section 5364 of. the present Code, made it the duty of the trial-judge to give that charge to the jury in the terms in which it was written. The trial judge did not do so, and in-refusing to do so committed an error for which this cause must be reversed and remanded for further proceedings in the court below.

^Reversed and remanded.

Note.- — The foregoing opinion was prepared by Judge de Graffenried, Avliile he was a judge of this court, and is adopted by the court.