The complainant contained four counts, but the first and fourth are not here for review, the trial court having eliminated them by charges given at the request of the defendant.
The second and third counts are predicted upon the second subdivision of the employer’s liability statute *375(section 1749, Code of 1896), which provides: “When the injury is caused by reason of the negligence of any person in the service or employment of the master “or employer, who has any superintendence intrusted to him, whilst in the exercise of such superintendence, the master shall be liable to answer in damages.” ' Demurrers to these counts, proceeding upon the theory of generality of averment as to the superintendence intrusted to the person named, and upon the further theory that the counts state only conclusions, were overruled. By appropriate assignments of error, the judgment on the demurrers is presented for review.
Tested by the numerous decisions of this court, it is obvious that the counts are sufficient, and that the demurrers were properly overruled. — Williamson Iron Co. v. McQueen, Adm’r, 144 Ala. 265, 40 South. 306, and cases there cited.
The plaintiff, as an employe of the defendant, Avith five others of defendant’s servants, Avas on the 17th day of January, 1907, engaged in loading lumber on a “lumber buggy” or tram car and moving it, on the car, from one part of defendant’s yard to another, all under the supervision of Frank Rich, defendant’s superintendent. The car stood on a standard-guage track, the sides projecting slightly over the track, and was 5 or 6 feet long, and the floor was 2 or 2%feet above the track. Said lumber consisted of pieces 3%x4 or 3*4x5 inches, 16 feet long, and these were being loaded onto the car lengthwise, in tiers, and over the entire width of the car. The testimony as to the heigth to which the lumber was thus stacked on the car varied the height from 2 feet to 4 feet. After being loaded, the car was rolled onto a turntable to be shifted to another track. The turntable was made fast by a latch which fitted into a slot. After the car was placed on the table, the super*376intendent would command the servant in position nearest to the latch to unlatch the table. On this occasion thé command was given to the plaintiff, and in obeying it he got upon his knees, in a “crouching position,” lifted the latch and held it in his hand, and followed the table, as it turned, until it was brought into position from which the car might be run onto the track designated by the superintendent, when plaintiff (as the testimony offered by him tended to show) dropped the latch into the slot, “without any jar or concussion,” making the table fast again. Plaintiff then started to move out from under the side of the car, whereupon two tiers of the lumber fell from the car upon him, inflicting a painful injury.
The first question presented for consideration by the charges refused to the defendant is whether or not the plaintiff was entitled to have the issue of negligense vel non passed upon by the jury, the insistence of the appellant (defendant) being that there is nothing in the evidence which would afford a reasonable inference that the falling of the lumber was the result of negligence on the part of defendant’s superintendent. In this connection, appellant’s counsel makes the point, broadly, that the doctrine or maxim res ipsa loquitur has no application in cases between master and servant, and, therefore, that the falling of the lumber itself cannot form a predicate for reasonable inference of negligence. While it must be conceded that this doctrine is more freely and appropriately applied in cases of passenger and carrier, yet not only has this court applied the doctrine in a case between master and servant (Tenn., etc., Co. v. Hayes, 97 Ala. 201-207, 12 South. 98), but — as will be seen by reference to cases cited in note 8 to text, page 2303, 2 Labatt, Master & Servant — courts of other jurisdictions have, under certain circumstances, applied the *377maxim in such cases. But, however this might be decided, the exigencies of the instant case do not require a determination of the question. The essential import of that doctrine in any given case is that, on the facts proved, the plaintiff has, without direct proof of negligence, made out a prima facie case. In other words, it seems there is no peculiar magic in the Latin maxim. As was said in the oft-quoted case of Graham v. Badger, 164 Mass. 42, 47, 41 N. E. 61, it is “merely a short way of saying that, so far as the court can see, the jury, from their experience as men of the world, may be warranted in thinking that an accident of this particular kind commonly does not happen except in consequence of negligence, and that, therefore, there is presumption of fact, in the absence of other explanation, or other evidence which the jury believe, that it happened in consequence of negligence.” And thus is brought out the fact clearly, “so often overlooked, that it is the jury which makes the presumption in giving proper effect to the evidence, the jury which says res ipsa loquitur.”— See 66 Cent. Law J. No. 20, p. 386; Bien v. Unger, 64 N. J. Law, 596, 46 Atl. 593. Therefore, where the servant (plaintiff) produces other evidence than the mere fact of the accident — in other words, if there is any specific evidence, positive or circumstantial, bearing on the question of negligence, which will warrant a reasonable inference of negligence — there is no necessity for the invocation of the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur in aid of, or to establish, a prima facie case. This is clearly illustrated in a case, decided by the Missouri court, in which an employe’ was injured by the falling of a bridge. We quote: “Where all the details of the construction of a bridge and its inspection are before the jury, the case of a servant who is injured by the fall of the bridge does not stand merely on the fact that the structure gave *378way, and it is not error to leave the jury to say whether the defendant’s want of reasonable care in the erection and inspection of the bridge occasioned the injury complained of.” — Bowen v. Chicago, etc., Co., 95 Mo. 268, 8 S. W. 230.
In the case at bar the evidence shows the dimensions of the lumber, the dimensions of the car, the manner in which the lumber was loaded on the'car, the description of the turntable, and, in addition, tends to show that the load was unusually large, considering the length of the lumber. Concerning it, a witness testified: “I call it an extraordinary large load for the length of it.” The witnesses for plaintiff, it is true, testified that they did not know what caused the lumber to fall off, but they testified that the car was standing perfectly still, and that there was no “jar or shock.” It cannot be doubted it was a duty the defendant company owed the plaintiff, to see to it, through its superintendent, that the car was properly and securely loaded. The superintendent was'present for that purpose; he knew the conditions of the track on which the car was to run (or it was his duty so to be advised) ; he knew the dimensions of the car and of the lumber, and he saw how the lumber was loaded. Under the testimony, we think it more probable that the falling of the lumber was due to a cause for which defendant was responsible than to a cause for which it was not responsible. In other words, we think the testimony warrants the inference that the falling of the lumber might reasonably be attributed to overloading, or to the improper loading of the car, which would constitute negligence. As was aptly said by the trial judge, in response to the motion for a new trial: “It being the duty of the superintendent to oversee the loading and moving of the cars, it was certainly his duty to be acquainted with the conditions under which *379loading and transportation were to be done, and a failure to use proper care in loading with reference to such conditions would be negligence. If the car was safely loaded, taking into consideration all the conditions, then the lumber did not fall under the circumstances recited by plaintiff’s witness, or, at least, there is no probability that it did. But the lumber did fall, and unless accounted for by defendant’s -witnesses, it must have fallen because, under the conditions existing, it was not securely loaded. As the falling of the lumber could be reasonably accounted for, either as being due to unsafe loading or to the impact of the latch against the catch on the track, and as the defendant attempted to account for it on the latter theory and by direct testimony, the jury would not have been justified in accounting for it on some other imaginable theory, or in not accounting for it at all.”
Upon the whole, the court is not of the opinion that the facts proved left the question as to what caused the injury wholly in conjecture, as distinguished from inference; but the court is of opinion that the trial court properly regarded the question of negligence vel non one for the determination of the jury, and committed no error in declining to exclude the evidence offered by plaintiff.
The testimony for the defendant tended to show that the lumber was caused to fall by the .plaintiff’s dropping the latch against, instead of in, the slot; and that this jarred the car to such an extent as to cause the lumber to fall. It also tended to show that the manner in which the plaintiff latched the table was not the proper way; that he should have used a stick, and not have gone around with the car. In respect to these two defenses,' it should suffice to say the testimony was in conflict. Furthermore, even if the stick was the proper implement to be used in latching, and if it had been used by the *380plaintiff on the occasion here involved, yet the testimony tends to show that when the table stopped, whether the stick was used or not to latch the table, it was necessary for the person doing the latching to go under the car and latch with the hand. So it was a reasonable inference from the evidence that the failure to use the stick did not in this instance proximatelv contribute to plaintiff’s injury.
Upon the foregoing considerations, it follows that the court committed no error in refusing charges 2, 3, and 4, requested by the defendant. It may also be said of charge 3 that it is in bad form.
Charge 5, requested by the defendant, is subject to the criticism, indulged by appellee’s counsel, that it assumes that plaintiff Avas guilty of negligence. We think it subject also to the criticism that was placed upon charge 5 (defendant’s series) requested in the Miller Case, 107 Ala. 40, 60, 19 South. 37.
The court was under no duty to give charge 1. It asserts no proposition of law. — Mobile, etc., Co. v. Walsh, 146 Ala. 295, 40 South. 560.
The court gave charge 10 at plaintiff’s request. This action has been assigned as error, but appellant does not insist upon the assignment.
There is no reversible error in the ruling of the court allowing plaintiff to challenge juror Burgess. — Adams v. Olive, 48 Ala. 551, and cases there cited; Haynes v. Crutchfield, 7 Ala. 189, 195.
This brings us to a consideration of the rulings of the court upon the admissibility of testimony. Defendant asked its witness Worsham this question: “You have stated there was a safe Avay to have done it (latch the table). I will ask you whether getting under and taking the latch in your hand and going around with the latch was a safe way?” The ruling of the court, sustain*381ing objection to this question, may be justified on two or more grounds; but it suffices to say that, had the witness answered the question as the defendant expected he would answer it, the response would have been only a repetition of testimony already given by that witness.
The sixth ground in the assignment of errors mistakes the question sought to he reviewed, and cannot therefore claim the attention of the court.
We have not been shown that the court should have granted the motion for a new trial.
No error appearing in the record, the judgment appealed from must he affirmed.
Affirmed.
Tyson, C. J., and Simpson and Anderson, JJ., concur.