62 So. 816 | Ala. | 1913
— This action is to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by
The first count of the complaint, omitting style of case and details as to character and extent of the injuries, was in the following language: “The plaintiff claims of the defendant $10,000 damages, for that, heretofore, to-wit, September 18, 1911, while the plaintiff was in a vehicle, to-wit, an automobile, upon a public street in the city of Birmingham, Ala., a collision occurred between said vehicle and a street car operated by defendant upon said public street, and as a proximate consequence of said collision plaintiff was thrown or caused to fall, was greatly shocked, was mashed, bruised, cut, and otherwise injured in her person. * * * Plaintiff alleges that defendant negligently caused or allowed said collision on the occasion aforesaid and plaintiff’s said consequent injuries and damages.”
The defendant demurred to this count, assigning, among others, the following special grounds of demurrer :
“(1) For that the averments of said counts are vague, uncertain and indefinite.
“(2) For that it does not appear with sufficient certainty what duty the defendant owed to'the plaintiff.
“(3) For that it does not appear therefrom with sufficient certainty wherein or how the defendant violated any duty which It owed to the plaintiff.
“For that sufficient causal connection does not therein appear between defendant’s said negligence and plaintiff’s alleged injuries. •
‘For that it does not appear therein with sufficient certainty how or in what manner defendant negligently caused or allowed said collision.”
The trial court overruled the demurrer, and this ruling is the first assignment insisted upon as error.
It is true that the count in plain and concise language alleges a collision between an automobile in Avhich plaintiff Avas riding and a street car operated by the defendant, and injuries to plaintiff in consequence of the collision; but what caused the collision — whether it was an inevitable accident, or the result of some will
It is said in Sherman & Redfield on Negligence, § 3, that negligence, to constitute a cause of action, must be such an omission, by a responsible person, to use that degree of care, diligence, and skill which it was his legal duty to use for the protection of another person from injury as in a natural and continuous sequence causes unintended damage to the latter. As an illustration of this rule the text says, if a complaint against a common carrier should confine itself to an averment that the defendant had neglected to use ordinary' care or that it was guilty of negligence in the carriage or the delivery of the goods, it would be bad without alleging that the defendant was a common carrier, or something equivalent thereto; that merely alleging that defendant was negligent, and that damages resulted to plaintiff, is not sufficient; facts must be alleged which show a duty or obligation and a breach thereof. It is said in all the texts and decisions upon the subject that there are various definitions of actionable negligence; but the authorities all agree that the word “negligence,” when used in its legal sense, must obviously exclude all acts and omissions which do not violate any legal obligation or duty. If the defendant owed no duty, there can be no legal or actionable negligence. If he did owe
The negligence of the defendant may only put a temptation in the way of a third party to commit ai wrong which results in the injury of the plaintiff; but this alone does not make the defendant liable. The breach of duty alleged must not only be the cause, but it must be the proximate cause of the damage alleged. If an original act is negligent and wrongful, and will naturally, according to the usual and ordinary course of events, prove injurious to some other person or persons, and does actually result in injury through the intervention of other causes which are not wrongful, but proper, the injury is then referred to only the wrongful cause, passing by those which are innocent; but, if the original wrongful or negligent act becomes injurious only in consequence of the intervention of some other distinct wrongful or negligent act, the injury must
New subjects have given courts more trouble than the one of “proximate cause” as applied to negligence cases. The difficult question has been to determine what is and what is not the proximate cause of a given injury. As pointed out by text-writers and decisions, confusion and uncertainty has resulted from a failure to observe the legal, if not the literary, distinction between conditions and causes. Mr. Wharton, in his able work on Negligence, speaking to this particular subject, says (page 89) : “At this point emerges the distinction between conditions and causes, a distinction the overlooking of which has led to much confusion in this branch of the law. What is the cause of a given phenomenon? The necessitarian philosophers who logically treat all the influences which lead to a particular
The law cannot undertake to trace back the chain of causes indefinitely, for it is obvious that this would lead to inquiries far beyond human power and wisdom —in fact, infinite in their scope. It therefore stops at the first link in the chain of causation, and looks only to the person who is the proximate cause of the injury. Sherman & Redfield on Negligence, § 9. The general rule is that the damage to be recovered must be the natural and proximate consequence of the act complained of. — 2 Greenl. Ev. 256. “It is not enough if it be the natural consequence; it must be both natural and proximate.” — Per Byles, J., in 8 C. B. (S. S.) 665. To maintain an action for special damages, they must be the legal and natural consequences arising from the
Applying these principles of law to the allegations of the count in question, it is apparent that the count is insufficient. If it could be said that it shows negligence on the part of the defendant, the facts alleged' show neither a duty breached, nor that the negligence complained of was the proximate cause of the injury complained of. In order to support such general averments of negligence as are found in this count, some relation such as passenger and carrier must he shown to have existed, or there must be some statute providing that a prima facie case is made against the defendant, on the showing of such state of facts, as against railroads for injuries to animals on its track, or other special case as the setting out of fire by an engine, where the presumptions of law will render allegations of the facts unnecessary. This distinction was at an early date pointed out by this court, and made clear by illustrations in the case of Ensley Railway Company v. Chewning, 93 Ala., 26, 9 South. 459. It was there said: “A general averment of negligence has been held sufficient, when the complaint averred that the plaintiff sustained the relation of passenger to the railroad company, or was an infant of tender years, not capable of contributory negligence, or that the injury was to stock. — L. & N. Railroad Co. v. Jones, 83 Ala. 376 [3 South. 902]; Mobile & Montgomery Railway Co. v. Crenshaw, 65 Ala. 566; S. & N. Ala. R. R. Co. v. Thompson, 62 Ala. 494. The statement of either of the foregoing facts has been regarded as a sufficient averment otf facts showing the duty to act; but in no case, except in Alabama & Florida R. R. Co. v. Waller, 48 Ala. 459, has a general averment of simple negligence been held sufficient, when not accompanied by an averment of
A principle of law and pleading often overlooked or disregarded by pleaders in negligence cases is that instead of stating the facts which show the relations of the parties, or the duties which the one owes the other, or which show that the injury complained of was proximately caused by the negligence complained of, they attempt to state the cause of action by stating the conclusions merely, or, attempting to avoid this error, they run into another as bad, of stating the evidence by> which they hope to prove the facts which will support the desired conclusions. If pleaders would remember that pleadings, as a rule, should state the facts of the case only, and not the conclusions of the pleader, nor the evidence or proof by which it is proposed to establish the facts, much of the trouble of pleadings Avould be avoided. These are two common and grave errors of pleaders. In negligence actions,, as the authorities agree, a duty, and a bréaeh thereof, must be shoAvn; but it must be shown by simply alleging the facts which, aided by the law, create the duty. It is not sufficient to allege, merely as a conclusion of the pleader, that the duty existed, and was breached, but the facts
There was no error in allowing the question propounded to plaintiff on her redirect examination: “Mrs. Ely, Mr. Dominick asked you whether or not you were nervous before that time. Did that collision, being knocked unconscious, improve that nervousness or increase it?” The only objection insisted on in brief of counsel was that the question called for “an unauthorized conclusion of the witness.” The question was proper at this stage of the trial; the plaintiff had been cross-examined for the purpose of showing that she was nervous before, as well as after, the collision. It was therefore proper to show whether there was any change in her condition after the shock, and, if so, what it was. This is all the question called for, and it was therefore quite proper. There was likewise no- reversible error in allowing the question propounded to the witness Dangerfield touching in what distance the motorman had stopped the car. The question was asked the witness as an expert, and he was shown to be an expert. The more orderly way would have been to first show that he was an expert; but showing it after-wards without dispute cured the error. If the court’s definition of “wantonness” -was inaccurate, or not clearly expressed, it affirmatively appears that this' error was subsequently corrected, and all its misleading-tendencies removed, by subsequent instructions.
There was no reversible error in refusing defendant’s charge 2, which was as follows: “The court charges the jury that if, after a fair and full consideration of all the evidence, it leaves your minds in a state of uncertainty and confusion as to who should recover in this case, and does not reasonably satisfy you that
What we have said of charge 2 disposes of the next assignment of error relating to the refusal of charge 4.
Charge 5, refused to the defendant, was as follows: “If the jury believe from the evidence that the plaintiff’s injuries resulted in consequence of a wrongful act or omission on the part of the motorman in charge of defendant’s car, but only through or by means of some negligence on the part of the negro chauffeur in charge of the auto in which plaintiff was riding, from which last negligence the injury followed as a direct and immediate consequence, then plaintiff’s injuries should be referred to the negligence of the negro chauffeur, and should not be traced to the negligence of defendant’s motorman.” This charge asserted a correct proposition of law, and it was not abstract, as applied to the evidence in this case. It could not be refused on the ground that it attempted to hold plaintiff answerable for the contributory negligence of the driver of the auto in which she was riding. It asserted the proposition of law — and that only — that if plaintiff’s injuries were proximately caused by the negligence of the chauffeur, and not by the negligence of the defendant’s
Charge 9 was likewise a proper charge, as applied to the evidence in this case, and its refusal was error. This charge was as follows: ‘If the jury believe that the negro chauffeur in charge of the automobile in which plaintiff was riding was negligent in running the automobile down the hill at the time of the collision between it and defendant’s street car, and that this negligence on his part was the sole proximate cause of the collision and plaintiff’s injury, then you should find a verdict for the defendant.” If the facts hypothesized in this charge were found to exist by the jury, and the charge left the question to them, and there was evidence from which the jury could so find, the defendant was not liable, and the jury should have been so instructed.
We find no substantial duplicate of these charges. Other charges like these were given, but in each of them negligence of the chauffeur was confined to one particular act of negligence, as for excessive speed, or reckless running of the car, but did not cover all the tendencies of the evidence as did these two charges. If these two refused charges had been given, they would have covered the given ones, but the given ones do not fully cover the refused ones. 'The other charges refused were confused and misleading.
Reversed and remanded.