119 Ala. 572 | Ala. | 1898
Action for damages against the railroad company for personal injuries.
We hold, upon due consideration, that none of the counts of the complaint are subject to the demurrers assigned to them, though some of us were inclined to think too much indefiniteness and uncertainty, in stating the relation Avhich the plaintiff bore to the defendant’s service at the time he was injured, and hOAV the injury was inflicted, characterized some of the counts. Pleadings ought to be clear and explicit in their averments. We, hoAvever, qualify the above statement so far as it applies to one objection raised to the second count. The point of this objection is that the count does not show that the engine was “upon a railway or of some part of the track of a raihvay” within the terms of subdivision five of the Employers’ Liability Act. As the judgment must be reversed for other causes, and as, in point of undisputed fact, in the cause, the engine in question Avas upon the railway of the defendant, we will not pass uoav upon the practically abstract question, suggesting merely that it Avould be well for the plaintiff' to relieve the case of it by making the allegation insisted upon as necessary.
There Avas no plea of contributory negligence specifying what particular negligence of the plaintiff was relied upon, but there was a general plea that the injuries complained of Avere the proximate result of plaintiff’s contributory negligence, on Avhich issue was joined. This authorized the defendant to make any defense of contributory negligence Avhich its evidence might establish, and evidence of any negligence, legally contributory, was admissible under it.
Taking the plaintiff’s undisputed testimony as evidence of the facts, at the time of his injury he was engaged, under employment of the defendant, as a car-coupler and brakeman on a train in defendant’s sendee. When injured, the train Avas being run on a sidetrack AAdiich belonged to a furnace company, but which was used by the defendant, for SAvitching cars for the furnace company. The track was in bad condition; the rails being old and Avorn and the stub switch mismatched. On the day of the injury, plaintiff’s train went in on this sidetrack and was thrown from the track by said mismatched stub switch. Within an hour on
Under this eAÚdence, about which there is no dispute, it is manifest that the case comes within the principle declared in Birmingham Ry. Co. v. Allen, 99 Ala. 359, (reaffirming Eureka Co. v. Bass, 81 Ala. 201); L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Stutts, 105 Ala. 368; L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Banks, 101 Ala. 508, to the effect that plaintiff voluntarily took upon himself the hazard of the dangerous track and switch, by so long continuing, knowingly, to expose himself to the danger, unless there is something else in the case AAduch takes it without the principle; and for this purpose, the plaintiff relies upon the folloAVing facts: One Wooclliff Avas section foreman, and Avith his force, did the track repair Avork on a part of defendant’s road, including the track where the injury occurred. Plaintiff testified that when they went in at the switch that day, (which, we have seen, was an hour or an hour and a half before they came out and the injury occurred), they saw Wooclliff at work close to the point, doing some job, 300 or 400 yards from the point where they got the car off. Wooclliff came up there while they had. the car off, and plaintiff told him that the switch was out of order, Avas not matched and that they had
The evidence of the duties of Woodliff was as follows: B. L. Stewart, yard master of defendant and conductor of said train, testified that the section foreman got his orders from the supervisor; that section for emeu’s general duty is to keep the track in repair; the supervisor merely sees that it is so kept. The plaintiff testified “that defendant had Woodliff seeing after the branch from G-adsden to Attalla and keeping the track in proper repair, and he did the work on this track, where I was hurt.” Further on he said: “It is the duty of the section foreman to keep the track in proper repair.” it is com
We hold, therefore, that it was competent for the plaintiff to make the proof in reference to repair of the track by Woodliff, and his, Woodliff’s report to the crew that the track had been fixed and was safe for the train 'to go out on. It was admissible to be considered by the jury in determining whether the plaintiff voluntarily accepted the danger, which would, as we have said, have been the case without some intervening fact which justified him in continuing in the service. If the section foreman reported to plaintiff that the track had been fixed so as to be safe, and there was nothing to cause ¿he plaintiff to disbelieve the statement, the plaintiff had the right, in good faith, to rely upon the information so received and continue in the service, so far as danger from t'he defects to which the information related were concerned; and if, under such circumstances, he did rely upon it, and continue in the service when he would not otherwise have done so, his continuance in the service was not an assumption of the risk.
The statement of the witness, Stewart, that on two or three different occasions not long before the accident, perhaps a day or two before, he told the engineer, Jackson, to run slow while switching backward and forward on the furnace track, was objected to by the defendant on the grounds that the same was irrelevant and immaterial. Some of the counts of the complaint charged that the injury resulted from the negligence of the engineer in running the train too fast. In view of this issue it was competent for the plaintiff to show that the engineer had received notice, shortly before the injury, of the bad condition of the track, and that the evidence
The first charge requested by the plaintiff Avas abstract in so far as it allowed recovery for expenses suffered by plaintiff in and about his cure. There Avas no proof at all of the expense he suffered; the jury had no data to be governed by, and the charge submitted to them a matter they could not determine. The charge Avas misleading, in a way that might have induced the jury to the prejudice of the defendant to alloAV the plaintiff for the medical services rendered by Dr. Stewart, under the employment of the defendant, and for which it had paid- The court erred in giving the charge.
Under the facts of this case it Avas immaterial whether plaintiff had given the defendant notice of the condition of the track or not. If, as we have said, he was not justified in continuing or did not continue in the service, by reason of what occurred with Woodliff, in reference to the repair of the track, on the day of the injury, the undisputed facts of the case are such, that he Avas not entitled to recover on account of the condition of the track, AAiiether he had given defendant notice of the condition or not. So that, charges 2 and 4 given for plaintiff Avere upon immaterial questions, and might have been refused.
Charge number 3 Avas abstract and erroneous and ought to have been refused. There Avas no evidence that the defendant, through Woodliff or any one else, agreed to remedy the defect in the track, and if there had been, the charge ignores the inquiry as to Avhether the plaintiff kneAV that the agreement had not been carried out. We have already stated what occurred between Woodliff .and the crew.
It was insisted by the defendant that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in taking the position he did on the train, on the occasion of the injury. The evidence on that subject was as folloAvs: The plaintiff testified, that at the time of the injury he Avas standing on the end sill between two cars, the first and second cars from the front; that one had to stand on the end sill to set the brakes up, and that he set the brakes up as soon as he turned over the hill, in about 200 or 300 yards of the place of the injury; that his place that day
Boggus’ testimony, so far as it touched on these points, Avas about the same, and there was no evidence in conflict Avith the plaintiff’s, except as to the speed of the train — the defendant’s eAddence being that the train was running about eight miles per hour. If this testimony was true, Ave do not see hoAV contributory negligence, in the respect now under consideration, can be imputed to the plaintiff. It shows that he was at his proper place, and, Ave think, the jury could have draAvn no other inference from it, but that the best thing he could have done for his OAvn safety was to jump, as he did. We think, therefore, that charge numbered five given for the plaintiff, was not objectionable on the ground that it ignored this character of contributory negligence, and confined the question of contributory negligence to the plaintiff’s remaining in the service, with knowledge of the condition of the track. But the
The sixth charge requested by the plaintiff was properly given.
Charge one requested by the defendant ought to have been given.
Count seven of the complaint covered the case of a mismatched switch. Wherefore charge two requested by the defendant was properly refused.
Defendant’s charges 8, 4 and 5 were properly refused.
The general charges on the whole case, and the several counts were properly refused, except as to the sixth count for the reason .that the allegation of that count that the name of the person guilty of the alleged negligence was unknown to the plaintiff, was disproved by the undisputed evidence, and the general charge, on that count ought to have been given. — L. & N. R. Co. v. Bouldin, 110 Ala. 185. The allegation is not authorized to be made as a mere form, to be lost sight of in the proof. It is substantial, and when made there can be no recovery under the count making it, if the proof shows it was not true, as in this case.
For the errors mentioned, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.