71 So. 455 | Ala. | 1916
Appellee’s decedent was killed by defendant’s train about half past 4 on April 21, 1914, at the Beverly crossing. The place in question was in one of the outer districts of the city of Birmingham, where there were only a few buildings scattered around, but it was where Jefferson street, sometimes referred to as the old Tuskaloosa Road, the main thoroughfare between Birmingham and Bessemer, crossed defendant’s main line at grade, and the evidence goes to show that it was a crossing much used by persons passing on foot and in vehicles. On the trial of plaintiff’s (appellee’s) suit, brought under the Homicide Act, there was verdict and judgment for plaintiff, damages being assessed at $6,500, and from that judgment defendant has appealed, assigning for error, among other things, the action of the court in overruling its motion for a new trial.
All the evidence upon which the jury acted is before us. We have not visited the locus in quo, as did the jury under the court’s permission and direction, but a carefully prepared map, drawn to scale and purporting to show street crossings, buildings and street car lines in the immediate vicinity, has been reproduced in the transcript of the bill of exceptions. The accuracy of this map has not been questioned, nor does it disclose any points of difference from the testimony of witnesses many of whom referred to it, thus, and otherwise, locating objects in the neighborhood. There is therefore not the slightest reason for assuming that the jury saw anything which might affect that view of the case which has been forced upon us by what we consider to be quite plain considerations of law and justice.
Weighing the evidence with all proper deference for the jury’s findings and for the judgment of the trial judge permitting the verdict to stand, without impeaching the deliberate material testimony of a single witness, drawing only such inferences as a reasoned reflection upon the logic of undisputed facts has rendered necessary,, we have learned the relevant material facts involved in the death of plaintiff’s decedent as well as any appellate court can ever hope to learn the facts of such a case, and they have produced in our mind a conviction that the verdict was founded upon some erroneous conception in the minds of the jury going to the substantial merits of .the cause.
We come now to the evidence adduced by defendant. The overwhelming weight of this evidence, considered in connection with that offered by plaintiff, went to prove that the whistle was blown and the bell rung. It tended very strongly also to show that the train moved over the crossing at a rate of speed not in excess of the daily average speed at that point. In other respects it was not in conflict with any part of the testimony offered by plaintiff. But it went further, giving a new element, and involving new issues, as to which defendant’s evidence was without conflict and had substantial collateral corroboration in the testimony of the witnesses who testified for plaintiff.-
Reference is also-made to the testimony of Richie, the witness to whom we have heretofore referred as saying that his attention was attracted by hearing some one say in a stressful voice that he (deceased) could not or would not make it: This witness testified, and this part of his testimony the brief quotes, supplying italics: “The train picked him up on the base beam,' I would call it, across the front of the engine where the cowcatcher is fastened in the side, and he fell off as soon as the brake was set up and stopped the force of the engine.”
All the evidence tended to show' that the body of deceased was carried 100 feet before it fell off the engine, this distance
Appellee also refers to some testimony to the effect that the train moved about a quarter of a mile after passing the crossing; this, we suppose, as tending to prove that no prompt,' timely, and efficient effort was made to check the speed of the train. We do not know, and so far as the evidence gave the jury to understand, they did not know, in what distance the train might have been stopped in the conditions prevailing. The fact, if accepted according to appellee’s contention, may as well have tended to show'the great original speed of the train, and great speed, in view of the uncontradicted evidence as to' the actions of deceased and the circumstances in which he went upon the track, could only tend to relieve defendant of the imputation of subsequent negligence or wrong as necessarily increasing the difficulty of avoiding the then impending disaster, for the momentum of a mass in motion increases in proportion to the acceleration of its velocity.
Ordinarily just reasons for the verdict of a jury are not hard to find upon the face of the record of the evidence. In this case, if the verdict had been for the defendant, no one could have doubted that'such result was prima facie fair and just. But in view of the jury’s conclusion to the contrary, it has seemed necessary by a close examination of the record to identify' and define those controverted issues of fact upon which a just resolution depended, and then to consider the reasonableness of the result in view of the issues thus identified and defined and the evidence having proper and material bearing upon them. The justification of the result in every case may be thus brought on review to the test of judicial reason,- and in this case our judgment is, not only that plaintiff failed to sustain the burden of proof resting upon him in respect of the final and controlling issue in the cause arising out of the charge of subsequent negligence, but that, after according every reasonable presumption in favor of the
It follows also that, if there was no actionable negligence after the engineer discovered that plaintiff's decedent would go upon the track, then,, under the law, there could have been no subsequent act of wanton wrong.—Helms v. Central of Georgia, supra.
For error in giving this charge and in denying the motion for a new trial on the substantial merits of the cause, the judgment must be reversed.
Reversed and remanded.