In amended count 1, upon which alone this cause went to the jury, plaintiff claimed damages for injuries done to his storehouse in the town of Leeds, alleging, to state the count in general terms, that defendant had caused the injuries complained of by negligently exploding a heavy charge of dynamite, to wit, 13,000 pounds, in its rock quarry in the neighborhood. Errors are assigned and argued upon the action of the trial court in overruling defendant's demurrer to the count and upon some rulings on questions of evidence.
The court is of opinion that the demurrer to count 1 of the complaint was properly overruled. The count avers that defendant "caused or permitted to be fired in said rock quarry in proximity to the town of Leeds, Ala. (where plaintiff's property was, as the count averred) a heavy charge of dynamite, to wit, 13,000 pounds," alleges the damage done to plaintiff's property thereby, and then alleges that "said damages were the proximate consequence and caused by reason of the negligence of the defendant," in other words, characterizes defendant's act in firing the charge as negligently done. This was sufficient. In Birmingham Ore Mining Co. v. Grover, 159 Ala. 276,48 So. 682, the question involved was of defendant's duty to persons upon its premises, and the ruling was that the complaint should have shown that defendant knew, or in the exercise of reasonable diligence should have known, that plaintiff was in a place where missiles from the blasting would probably reach and injure him. In other words, the complaint failed to charge defendant with knowledge or notice that plaintiff was on defendant's premises. Here the complaint was of injury to property in the neighborhood by causing great shock, and the pleader was properly allowed to state the facts, which in themselves may have been ambiguous, and draw the conclusion of negligence. Bessemer Co. v. Doak, 152 Ala. 166,44 So. 627, 12 L.R.A. (N.S.) 389.
The statements elicited from plaintiff. testifying as a witness in his own behalf, as to what Lewis, defendant's superintendent, said, three or four days after the fact, about the manner and cause of the injury to plaintiff's property, should have been excluded. The statement by Lewis was in part a mere opinion, and in other part was a mere narration of a past occurrence, and for these reasons was inadmissible. Bank of Phœnix City v. Taylor, 196 Ala. 665, 72 So. 264; Danner Land Co. v. Stonewall Ins. Co., 77 Ala. 184; Ricketts v. Birmingham Street Rwy., 85 Ala. 600, 5 So. 353; Jones on Ev. § 357.
Evidence for defendant tended to show that other charges of dynamite as great as, or greater than, the charge which plaintiff claimed had caused his injury had been fired at the quarry, and that defendant's superintendent had not observed or heard of injuries to property caused thereby. In this connection, it seems, defendant's superintendent should have been allowed to testify that it was a part of his duty at the quarry to look around and have reports made to him whether injury had been done — meaning on other occasions, evidently — as tending to show the exercise of due care based on defendant's observation and experience in the business of blasting at that point. Birmingham Railway v. Alexander,93 Ala. 133, 9 So. 525; 25 C. J. 206. This testimony may have also performed a legitimate function in adding weight and significance to the witness' testimony that he had not known or heard of injury being caused by other blasts of equal or greater force.
Other assignments call for no special treatment. They are not likely to recur in their present shape, and we are not advised that error to reverse affected any of them.
For the errors noted, the judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded for another trial.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and MILLER, JJ., concur. *Page 466