56 So. 984 | Ala. | 1911
The theory of the action, which is instituted by appellee against appellant, is, according to the first count, that plaintiff’s mule was negligently frightened and caused to run away by noises made by a locomotive on the railway of the defendant. Omitting the allegations descriptive of the injury and damages ensuing therefrom, this count is as follows:
“The plaintiff claims of the defendant fl0,0Q0, as damages, for that, heretofore, to wit, on the 13th day of January, 1909, defendant was operating a train composed of a steam locomotive engine and certain cars upon a railway running near by a public highway, upon which public highway plaintiff was driving a mule attached to a vehicle; that defendant’s servants or agents in charge or control of said train caused said locomotive engine to make such great, oft-repeated or long-continued noise as that by reason thereof said mule was caused to get beyond control of plaintiff and run away. * * *
“Plaintiff avers that said mule was caused to get beyond the control of plaintiff, and plaintiff suffered said injuries and damage, as aforesaid, by reason and as a proximate consequence of the negligence of defendant, in this, that defendant negligently caused or allowed the said engine, on the occasion above referred to, to make or continue to make great and unnecessary noise while the same was near said public highway.”
In actions for damages, it is a common practice, in our courts, to form the first count of a number, so as to facilitate its partial adoption, .and to avoid repetition, in succeeding counts wherein distinguishable or different allegations of acts or omissions, constituting negligence, or willful or wanton wrong, are charged. Consistent with this practice, which is certainly not to be reprehended, it is usual to set forth a general history of the event along with a statement, of the relation of the parties to each other, etc., and then, in a concluding-paragraph, to allege the wrongful, proximate, cause of the injury and damage claimed. This practice cannot, of course, require or justify the construction of a count other than as a whole, as- an entirety; nor can such a count, when so considered, be exempted from the influence of the rule, if within it, that “the sufficiency of a complaint, in an action for personal injuries, which, undertakes to define the particular negligence which caused the injury, must be tested by the special allega
But, as we interpret the count under consideration, it is not within the rule quoted. The noise caused or allowed to be made, on the one occasion, is alleged to have been “great and unnecessary,” to have been “great, oft-repeated, or long-continued,” and that this was “negligently caused or allowed.”
The Weathers and Parker Cases, reported in 164 Ala. 23, 51 South. 303, and 156 Ala. 251, 47 South. 138, respectively, turned upon the construction of counts different from the count now under review. A comparison of the counts therein treated and that in hand will discover the differences. It is insisted for appellant that the count is insufficient in the particular that it does not affirm that the noise was recklessly, wantonly, or intentionally made, or that it was made with knowledge, by the operative, that the making thereof would likely frighten plaintiff’s mule.
It is also insisted in brief, that the count-is defective in its omission to allege that the animal frightened was of ordinary gentleness. There is no ground of demurrer specifying the last-stated objection to the count. Hence the sufficiency of the count, as respects that criticism, cannot be considered or determined. Accord-' ing to our interpretation of the count, it is, under the authorities, not subject to the demurrer interposed.— Leach v. Bush, 57 Ala. 145 ; B. R. L. & P. Co. v. Jordan, 170 Ala. 530, 54 South. 280 ; Stanton v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 91 Ala. 382, 8 South. 798; B. R. L. & P. Co. v. Haggard, 155 Ala. 343, 46 South. 519; Oxford Lake Line Co. v. Stedham, 101 Ala. 376, 13 South. 553 — among others.
In Central of Georgia Railway Co. v. Fuller, 164 Ala. 196, 200, 51 South. 309, 310, following what we took to be the rule established by - decisions here, it was said: “That railroad companies have the right to operate their trains; that such companies have the right to make all the usual noises incident to the operation of their trains; and that negligence, alleged to have resulted in frightening an animal, cannot be predicated upon the operation of a train, unless in so doing unnecessary noises were made, and these noises, or the movement of the train, were recklessly or wantonly made or done after discovery of peril, or were made or done with the intention of frightening the animal in question. — A. G. S. R. R. Co. v. Fulton, 144 Ala. 332 [39 South. 282].”
It follows as of course that the mere want of necessity for making or allowing the noise, without more, is not negligence to liability for injury or damage resulting therefrom.' — Stanton v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 91 Ala. 382, 8 South. 798; Oxford Lake Line Co. v. Stedham, 101 Ala. 376, 13 South. 553; Levin v. M. & C. R. R. Co.,
Charge 2 was properly refused to defendant. The manner in which the whistle was blown may. have been “careful and proper,” and yet the blowing thereof, or the continuing to blow it, under the circumstances shown by the tendencies of the evidence,, may have been wan-* tonly done or done after becoming aware of his peril.— A. G. S. R. R. Co. v. Fulton, supra.
Besides, the phrasing of the instruction, in the particular that it hypothesized “that the plaintiff was not willfully, wantonly, or intentionally injured,” was inapt, under phases of the evidence, since the injury was claimed to have been primarily consequent upon the fright of the animal, which was produced by the noise described, and not necessarily as the immediate, direct result, or connected in the order of causation, of any wanton, willful, or intentional misconduct of the operative. This rendered the charge confusing, if not misleading.
There was evidence, though opposed by other testimony, upon which it was open to be found by the jury that after the animal became frightened by the noise of the whistle and was getting beyond the control of the plaintiff, and after the operative knew of the situation produced by these two facts (if so), the operative continued to blow the whistle, which, if done under those circumstances, justified a finding that the operative was consciously disregardful of the plaintiff’s safety in a condition of known peril, and that the basis for the imposition of exemplary damages existed. — Fulton’s Case, supra.
In Birmingham Railway, Light & Power Co. v. Moore, 163 Ala. 43, 50 South. 115, the instruction first Heated concluded upon the right of plaintiff to recover, not the measure of recovery, in an event, as is the case in hand.
The third assignment is based upon this quotation from the oral charge of the court: “Well, that proceeds also from a common sense idea. If a witness is reluctant in telling what he knows about it, or is swift to tell what he knows about it, or seems anxious to tell what he knows about' it, why naturally juries won’t have much confidence in these sort of witnesses.”
Succeeding this statement to the jury, the court said that this, with other suggestions for the aid of the jury in determining the credibility of witnesses, was “in the abstract,” that “the court does not say that anything of that sort has transpired in this case.” There is nothing in the bill to show that any witness on the trial brought himself within any of the categories mentioned by the court. We cannot presume that such was the case. It seems that the court was dealing, as it said it was, in general observations without any fact or act on the trial that invited or necessitated these observations.
In the light of the ample explanation in which the court took account of the exception, to the oral charge, affording the basis of the fourth assignment of error, no prejudicial error occurred.
The last assignment complains of the overruling of the defendant’s objection to this question to the witness J. C. Orr: “You have had much experience in mules. From what you saw of that mule, would you say it was a gentle or wild mule?”
The grounds of the objection to the question were that it sought matter not the subject of expert opinion; that it called for immaterial, irrelevant, and incompetent testimony; and that the witness ivas not shown to have a knowledge of these things.
This witness had testified that he ivas engaged in the horse and mule business; and had been so engaged about all his life; that he had owned and sold the mule in question; that he had never used the mule; that Bufford, the purchaser of the mule from him, had worked the mule to a dairy wagon five or six months; that the witness had “very often” seen the mule when being worked to the dairy wagon; that he had seen the mule “standing on the streets untied, where electric cars, automobiles, bicycles, and things of that kind were running around it;” and that “very often he (evidently referring to Bufford) would drive up in front of my barn and stand there with automobiles passing, but no electric cars passing.”
From the doctrine of the Stanton Case, supra, it would seem to follow that the ungentle disposition of the animal frightened, at least in the absence of full knowledge thereof by the operative charged, would be wholly immaterial to any issue raised by a general• traverse of a complaint like the count (the first) in this action.
Apart from this, however, the plaintiff’s voluntary effort to show that the mule was one of ordinary gentleness could not, under the doctrine of Stanton’s Case, supra, have involved prejudicial error to defendant on any idea that the matter of such testimony was irrelevant or immaterial to the issues in the cause. In that particular, such testimony tended to recognize a higher standard, in defendant’s behalf, whereby to determine negligence vel non of its operatives; the implication therefrom being that the fact that the animal frightened was one of ordinary gentleness was an essential factor in the solution of the inquiry of negligence vel non in the premises.
In Northern Alabama Railway Co. v. Sides, 122 Ala. 594, 26 South. 116, L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Vanzant, 158 Ala. 527, 48 South. 389, and L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Morgan, 165 Ala. 418, 51 South. 827, the negligence charged was with respect to objects, alleged to have frightened the animals, for the presence of which the defendants were held responsible. It Avas ruled in cases of that character that the disposition of the animal for gentle
There is no merit in the other grounds of the objectioh to the question to the witness Orr. While the answer sought and given, viz., “I would say that from what I have seen it was a gentle mule,” savored, in a sense, of a conclusion of the witness, yet it ivas not of that class of opinion evidence which the law holds inadmissible. — Whittler v. Franklin, 46 N. H. 23, 88 Am. Dec. 18; Sydleman v. Beckwith, 43 Conn. 9; Patterson v. S. & N. R. R. Co., 89 Ala. 318, 7 South. 437; Mattison v. State, 55 Ala. 224; Jones on Ev. (2d Ed.) § 360.
We have treated every error assigned. None of them being, in our opinion, well grounded, the judgment must be affirmed.
Affirmed.