39 So. 654 | Ala. | 1905
On the former appeal in this case (Alabama Great Southern Railroad Co. v. Guest, Administrator, 136 Ala. 348, 34 South. 968) the principles of the law applicable to the case under the issues on which it was last tried were then very fully stated. There is no substantia] difference in the facts now and then. The law as there stated, in the opinion of Haralson, J., applies with equal force and pertinency here. The case was tried on the counts in the complaint counting on willful or intentional misconduct on the part of the defendant’s servants or agents, or that which is in law the equivalent of willfulness, wantonness, or reckless indifference to probable” results. What was said on the former appeal may well be repeated here : “It cannot be denied that plaintiff’s intestate was a trespasser on defendant’s track, to whom the company owed no duty except the exercise of reasonable care to avoid injuring him, if and after his peril became apparent to its employes; but they had no right to kill him on this account if they could avoid it. Haley v. K. C. M. & B. R. R. Co., 113 Ala. 640, 21 South. 357. The doctrine thus stated and recognized, is not to he taken as of unqualified and unshaded application in all cases. A trespasser may not be yet discovered on the track of the company, but if the employe had reason to believe he was there it would be wantonness to take no care not to kill him. 'When a railroad runs its track through districts of a city, town, or village densely popu
The doctrine that the duty of those in the management and control and running of locomotive engines and cars not to willwully or intentionally or wantonly kill or injure a trespasser is just as imperative as if the person so injured at the time of such injury was lawfully at the place is too well settled to admit of question. In othey words, the duty owing to a trespasser not to willfully, intentionally, or wantonly injure him is as great as the duty owing 1» one who is not a trespasser. In such cases,
Charge No. 41, given at the instance of the plaintiff, states the law as above laid down, and the giving of it Avas, therefore, free from error. Likewise charge 42, given for the plaintiff, asserts the doctrine as above stated. It may be that this latter charge had a misleading tendency in the last clause, and for that reason might have properly been refused yet the giving of it does not constitute reversible error. When the charge is taken as a whole, it is rendered evident that the statement in the last clause — “notwithstanding there was no fault on the part of the servants of defendant” — had reference to the conduct of the servants after the discovery of the peril of the deceased. It was certainly open to the defendant, if he conceived that there was any tendency to mislead the jury in this respect, to have counteracted any such tendency by requesting an explanatory charge.
The eighth count of the complaint does not aver that the detached cars and caboose Avere being run at a high and dangerous rate of speed at the time they struck the deceased except possibly in an inferential way. It is averred in the first part of this count that the tAVO cars and caboose, which were detached from the train, were allowed to run down the main line of defendant’s track, and in the conclusion of the count it is averred: “And on the day aforesaid, a few feet south of said public cros
Charge 29, requested by the defendant, was substantially covered by written charges 13 and 15, given at the request of the defendant. Charge 18, requested by the defendant, was argumentative, and there was no- error in its refusal. Charges 19, 31, 32, 33 and 34, refused to the defendant, assert a contrary doctrine to that hereinabove laid down, and were therefore properly refused. Charges 20 and 30 were substantially covered by other written charges given at the instance of the defendant, and for this reason, if no other, there was no reversible error committed in their refusal. Charge 39 was faulty in form, and for this reason was properly refused.
Charges 23 and 37, requested by the defendant, were not abstract, as contended in argument by counsel for appellee, and on the facts hypothesized correctly stated the law. The trial court committed error in refusing to give each of said charges. It is insisted by counsel for appellee that charge 38, refused to- the defendant, was substantially covered by written charges given at the-instance of the defendant. We fail to find in the record any substantial duplicate for charge 38 in the written charges given for the defendant. This charge should have been given as requested. The definition of wantonness as contained in the charge is supported by Brown’s Case, 121 Ala. 221, 25 South. 609, and Bank’s Case, 132 Ala. 471, 31 South. 573.
For the errors pointed out, the judgment of the court below must be reversed, and the cause remanded.
Beversed and remanded.