60 So. 815 | Ala. | 1912
In this case the plaintiff, James W. Morgan, claims that on the night of August 11, 1911, he was knocked down by an automobile, Avkick was, at the time, owned and driven by the de
The defendant pleaded to the plaintiff’s complaint, in addition to the plea of the general issue, pleas 2a, 3a, 4a, and 5, which pleas the reporter will set out in his summary of the facts of this case, and upon the issues thus made the case was tried. There was a jury trial and a verdict for $6,000, and from the judgment pronounced upon the verdict the defendant appeals.
The plaintiff received his injuries in the city of Mobile, at the point Avhere St. Francis street, which runs east and west, is intersected hy St. Joseph street, Avhich runs north and south. The building occupied by the People’s Bank is situated on the south side of St. Francis street and on the east side of St. Joseph street. Bienville Square, a public square or park, is situated on the south side of St. Francis street and on the Avest side of St, Joseph street, St. Joseph street, at this particular point, is 46 feet wide from the sidewalk immediately west of the People’s Bank building to the sidewalk on the east side of Bienville Square. The plaintiff received his injuries while crossing the street at a regular street crossing for pedestrians, and while he was in the act of going across from the People’s Bank building to Bienville Square. He received his injuries about 8 o’clock at night, and it was raining at the time; but whether the rain was then falling heavily or lightly is in dispute. There seems to have been a cab stand on St. Joseph street immediately east of the side
The defendant, on the other hand, claims that he never struck the plaintiff at all. He claims that he had been to the Union Depot, and that when he reached the center of St. Francis street on his way south on St. Joseph street he saw a man and a woman leave Bienville Square and start east across the street to the People’s Bank; that he stopped his automobile and waited for them to cross the street; that the point where he stopped the automobile was not over ten feet from the point where the plaintiff received his injuries; that when the man and the woman reached the sidewalk next to the People’s Bank building he again started his automobile, and had only gone seven or eight feet when he heard the plaintiff scream; that he then looked, and saw the plaintiff not more than two or three feet in front of him; that he did not strike the plaintiff; that the plaintiff fell before the automobile reached him; that the automobile was traveling at a rate of speed not exceeding two miles per hour; and that he at once, upon hearing the plaintiff scream, stopped it.
While the defendant claims that it was raining heavily at the time — and this the plaintiff disputes — he testified that the lady to whom we have above referred had on a pink skirt, and if he could, when he claims to
While we have this phase of the case under discussion, it may be well for us to state that there is on St. Francis street a street car track, and that at the time the plaintiff left the sidewalk next to the People’s Bank a street car, going west, was at or near the eastern edge of St. Joseph street. There is no doubt about tlhe presence of the street car at or near the named point; for the plaintiff testifies that he saw the car as he started across the street, but further testifies that, as he was traveling in the same direction as the car and south of it, he knew he was in no danger from the car, and paid no further attention to it. The motorman of the street car claims that he stopped his car at the eastern edge of St. Joseph street, and that while his car was at a standstill an automobile stopped in front of him, with it rear wheels on the southern rail of the street car line, and remained there until he sounded his gong as a warning for it to move. This motorman also claims that when he sounded his gong two or three times the automobile moved forward down St. Joseph street in a southerly direction; that the automobile did not move very fast; and that' it had not moved over eight or ten feet when he heard some one scream. Undoubtedly some one did scream just before the plaintiff received his injuries — the scream, in fact, was but a part of the occurrence — but just at this point there is
Says the defendant: “As this man [meaning the plaintiff] hollered, why, I looked that way, and saw him in front of the machine. I put my foot on the clutch to release the engine, and I put on the brake, and I stopped her. I couldn’t have — I don’t think I Avent over a foot after this man hollered. I saw him after he fell. He fell right directly in front of the machine, and when he did he Avas hollering, and he laid there and held up his hand and said: ‘Stop! Stop! don’t run over me.’ ”
On the other hand, the plaintiff testifies that when he made the above exclamation the automobile Avas almost upon him; that it immediately struck him, knocking him down and passing the point where he Avas struck about the length of the automobile, or about 12% feet.
There is no contention or evidence that the defendant intentionally injured the plaintiff; and, as the defendant’s evidence all tends to show that if, in fact, the plaintiff was knocked doAvn by his car he, upon the discovery of the plaintiff, used all proper measures to bring his automobile to a standstill, then, if the car was stopped, .not “within a foot”- after the defendant discovered the plaintiff, but within 11¡. or 15 feet after
This conflict in the evidence as to the speed of the automobile at the time the plaintiff received his injuries, it seems clear’, called in question the truth of the statement of . the defendant and of the motorman that the defendant stopped his automobile as claimed by the defendant. The situation described by the plaintiff would more probably have existed as he describes it if the defendant’s automobile, instead of stopping as defendant and the motorman claimed, had, with rapidity, shot across St. Francis street ahead of the street car and run into the plaintiff as the plaintiff was nearing the sidewalk on the east side of Bienville Square; or if the automobile,. instead of being on St. Joseph street, was in fact traveling west on St. Francis street and, upon reaching St. Joseph street, had been suddenly turned by the defendant around the corner at the people’s Bank into St. Joseph street. At any rate, we think that the question as to whether or not the automobile in fact stopped, and Avhether it was proceeding slowly or rapidly when the plaintiff received his injuries, Avas one for the jury.- If the defendant’s version of this matter is true, then the plaintiff simply fell on account of the excitement or fright Avhich he suffered because of his sudden discovery of defendant’s slowly moving automobile in close proximity to him. If, on the other hand, the plaintiff’s version is true, then he was knocked down by defendant’s automobile when it was moving much more rapidly than the defendant would have the court to believe.
We are therefore of the opinion that the speed of the automobile, and whether it stopped on the occasion named, Avere matters, under the evidence, for the deter
The plaintiff, when he received his injuries, was crossing the street at a regular street crossing for pedestrians; and we find nothing in the disputed state of the facts which takes this case out of the operation of the general rule that negligence is not imputed, as a matter of law, to persons crossing a street at a regular crossing for pedestrians without stopping, looking, and listening for automobiles or other vehicles. — Adler v. Martin, 179 Ala. 97, 59 South. 597.
(1) The evidence was in dispute as to how the plaintiff held his umbrella on the occasion of the injury. His evidence tended to show that he held it in the ordinary way, above his head, and in such a way as not to obstruct his view. The evidence, or the circumstances which some of the evidence tended to establish, was also in dispute as to the speed of the automobile at the time referred to; and the jury, if they believed the account of the matter as given by the defendant and the motorman, had a right to infer that the automobile was not moving slowly, but rapidly, when the plaintiff was struck by it, if, in fact, he was struck by i't.
There was therefore evidence in the case from which the jury, as the sole judges of the evidence, had a right to find that the defendant failed to establish any of his special pleas. An inspection of the pleas will demonstrate the truth of this proposition.
(4) It appears from the evidence that the plaintiff, at the time he ivas injured, was in the employ of J. Pollock & Co., and was being paid a salary of $150 per month. The plaintiff further testified — and there was no evidence tending to dispute his testimony on that point — that while he was, owing to his injuries, unfit, to work J. Pollock & Co. stopped payment of his salary, and that during that time he received no salary from his said employers. The plaintiff further testified that while he was out of employment his employers, as a-matter of grace and as an act of kindness, made a donation to the plaintiff: There was no evidence tending to cast a doubt upon this part of the testimony of the plaintiff and, if true, the donation was, of course, made by the plaintiff’s employers to aid him in the period of his distress and disability. This donation was a matter with which the defendant had no concern. The amount or fact of the donation had no tendency to minimize the amount of the plaintiff’s damages, if he was entitled to any damages; and the court properly refused to require the plaintiff to state the amount of such do
(5) We have already indicated that, in our opinion, the question as to whether the plaintiff’s injuries were proximately caused by the defendant’s negligence was a question, under the evidence, for the jury. We have also stated that, in our opinion, the question as to whether the defendant established any of his special pleas was also a question for the jury. The appellant, therefore, is entitled to nothing on account of his eighth, ninth, tenth, and eleventh assignments of error..
(6) Whenever there is a material conflict among credible witnesses as to whether a certain event occurred in a particular way, then there must necessarily exist some doubt as to how the event did occur. Even in criminal cases the law does not require that the guilt of the defendant shall be shown by the evidence beyond all doubt, but only beyond a reasonable doubt. In the present case the jury may have, after considering all the evidence, entertained some doubt as to what was the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injuries; but they may have been reasonably satisfied that the plaintiff was entitled to recover. For this reason the trial court did not commit error in refusing the written charge made the basis of the twelfth assignment of error.
(7) Under the evidence in this case, a short summa- ■ i*y of which has already been given in this opinion, the trial court properly refused to give to the jury the written charge made the basis of the thirteenth assignment of error.
The verdict in this case Avas for $6,000. We cannot hold that the amount was so excessive as to authorize this court to reverse the action of the trial court in refusing to set it aside on that account. Neither are Ave of the opinion that, on any other ground, this court should disturb the ruling of the trial court upon the appellant’s motion for a new trial. — Cobb v. Malone & Collins, 92 Ala. 630, 9 South. 738; Central of Georgia Railway Co. v. White, 175 Ala. 60, 56 South. 574. There is
Affirmed.