Court Opinion

ID: 7367956
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-27 23:53:32.07107+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:20:49.349743
License: Public Domain

SAYRE, J.
(1) This case went to the jury on count A of the complaint, demurrer to which was overruled. The count, as a sufficient statement of a cause of action, finds support in Sloss-Sheffield Co. v. Stewart, 172 Ala. 516, 55 South. 785, where the same general averments of duty under similar circumstances was upheld. Plaintiff does not declare as an employee of defendant. His averment is that he was rigtfully on the premises of defendant as an employee of one Goode, who was employed by defendant to operate the mine. Plaintiff stood to defendant in the relation of an invitee upon-defendant’s premises to whom, in general, defendant owed only the duty of ordinary care and prudence to keep the premises under its control reasonably safe.— T. C. I. Co. v. Burgess, 158, Ala. 519, 47 South. 1029; Lookout Mountain Iron Co. v. Lea, 144 Ala. 169, 39 South. 1017. Or, as Cooley, C. J., states the doctrine in Powers v. Harlow, 53 Mich. 507, 19 N. W. 257, 51 Am. Rep. 154: ‘-A person giving such a license, especially when he gives it wholly or in part for his own interest as was the case here, and thereby invites others to come upon his premises, assumes to all who accept the invitation the duty to Avarn them of any danger in coming, which he knows of, or ought to knoiv of, and of which they are unaAvare.” — Bright v. Barnett Co., 88 Wis. 299, 60 N. W. 418, 26 L. R. A. 524.
*504The chain was an instrumentality rather than a place, and it would ordinarily he assumed against the pleader that it was furnished to plaintiff’s employer, not directly to plaintiff, in which-case, without more, as we shall see, the responsibility of plaintiff’s employer stood between plaintiff and defendant. But defendant may have assumed, by convention or by implication arising out of its practice in the premises, to care for the condition of the chain in use, and, if so, it assumed the duty of ordinary diligence in that regard; and to the averment of such responsibility the general language of the complaint, it seems, has been held sufficient.
The case was tried upon the count considered above and defendant’s general denial. There was judgment for the plaintiff.
(2) On the evidence defendant, appellant, contends that plaintiff’s employer,' Goode, ivas an independent contractor, and for that reason was not its employee within the averment of the complaint and the meaning of the law of master and servant; and, further and in either case, that defendant owed plaintiff no duty to look after the safety of the chain. The ruling on a very similar state of facts in Harris v. McNamara, 97 Ala. 181, 12 South. 103, would seem to make Goode an independent contractor. But it may be conceded that the. evidence here on that point is involved in some slight confusion, and the question as to the precise nature of the relation between Goode and defendant, if conclusive of the case, might have been proper for submission to the jury. But a resolution of that spécific question would not adequately meet the issue proposed by the complaint, for in either case Goode was “employed” within the broad meaning of that term as used in the complaint, and' the question of controlling importance, depending upon the legal intendments of plaintiff’s sit*505uation as an invitee, is whether by reason of the relation proved defendant owed plaintiff the duty of inspecting and controlling the condition of the chain that broke.
Defendant had not employed plaintiff. It had employed Goode to get the ore out of a “scram,” which is described as a small soft-ore mine complete in itself. Goode furnished his own tools, dynamite, and powder, employed and discharged at pleasure his own help, and was paid for the delivered ore by the ton. Defendent furnished timber for use in the “scram,” but Goode did his own timbering. Defendant furnished also a hoisting engine and cable, but Goode set up, arranged, and operated them according to his own notion. Goode made iise of a single car in getting ore out of the “scram,” and when preparing for the work, as we read the facts from the record, he passed the cable from the car to the engine through a pulley. Without consulting defendant or any of its managing agents, to stay the pulley or hold it in place, he picked up on the premises an old tracechain which he attached to the pulley and passed around a convenient tree. This chain broke under the strain, and so plaintiff was injured. Defendant is not shown to have exercised itself about the arrangement or to have given any attention to the condition or fitness of the chain, nor can such facts be properly inferred from the circumstance, which alone the plaintiff was able to show, that on one occasion defendant’s superintendent was near the place where the arrangement was in use. It thus appears without dispute that the chain was brought into service by Goode and was under his control. By taking employment from Goode plaintiff bargained with him for the safety of the instrumentalities furnished him, and presumptively Goode was liable for his mishap. So far *506as concerned plaintiff, with whom defendant had no contractual relation, defendant had the right to remit all consideration of the condition of the instrumentalities in use to the care and control of plaintiff’s employer by whom they were selected and kept in service; nor did defendant change the situation or assume obligation to Goode’s employees by actually furnishing the chain for the purpose for which it was used, or any other for that matter; nor did defendant by any actual exercise of control over the use of the chain assume the duty of diligence in the premises. Plaintiff’s recourse in the undisputed circumstances of this case wa.s against his employer, and defendant was due the general affirmative charge it requested in various shapes.