109 Ala. 128 | Ala. | 1895
Appellants sued in caseto recover damages for the killing of two oxen. After the evidence had closed, the court instructed the jury that, if they believed the evidence, their verdict should be the de7 fendant. The giving of this charge is assigned as error. The rule is that when there is a conflict in the evidence on material facts, or when the facts are if such a character, if believed, as to admit of different conclusions, the affirmative charge should not be given. On the other hand, if the evidence is such that, if believed by the jury, only one inference is left open, it is not error for the court to instruct the jury affirmatively in accordance'with such inference. We will test the instruction by this rule.
Neither of plaintiffs’ witnesses testified that they saw the killing. Their evidence shows that the oxen were killed on a fill, that the track was straight for two hundred and eighty steps before reaching the spot where the collision with the oxen occurred, and that the right of way was open for this distance ; that the train was running at its usual speed. This is plaintiffs’ case. There is no testimony to show the width of the right of way. The statute povides that the right of way in condemnation proceedings shall not exceed one hundred feet; it may be less. We can not presume its width. — Code of 1886, § 1580. The evidence is that the oxen were killed on “a fill.” We understand this tobe an embankment. How high this “fill” or embankment is— whether one foot or twenty feet — we are not informed in the abstract. What kind of a train, whether freight or passenger, is not stated. We can not presume the usual speed of a train, merely from the statement con7 tained in the abstract. The engineer testified-“that he had been an engineer for thirteen years ; that his engine was in good condition; that he was looking ahead ; that,, when he first saw the steers, they came running out on. the fill, in front of the engine; that he could not see them sooner; that he was so close that he could not possibly avoid killing them; that he blew for brakes, •but was too close to stop; that his train was a long
There is no error in the record.
Affirmed.