Birmingham Railway, Light & Power Co. v. Norton

61 So. 459 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1913

THOMAS, J.

This was an action by a pedestrian for injuries received in being run against by one of tbe ¡street cars of appellant company while be was attempting to cross tbe latter’s tracks on tbe streets of tbe city of Birmingham.

The first and tbe second count of tbe complaint, tbe one predicated on simple negligence, and tbe other on wantonness and willfulness, we bold sufficient as against tbe demurrers aimed at them, under tbe authority of Birmingham Railway, L. & P. Co. v. Ryan, 148 Ala. 69, 41 South. 616; Russell v. Huntsville Ry., L. & P. Co., 137 Ala. 628, 34 South. 855; and Leach v. Bush, 57 Ala. 152.

Plaintiff’s counsel, on cross-examination of one of defendant’s eye-witnesses to the accident, who bad testified that be bad no interest in the case and was not in tbe employ of the company, asked said witness a question substantially to tbe following effect, slightly changed by us in arrangement for convenience of treatment here: “Did not I approach you this morning just outside tbe door, and, after informing you of my name and that I was one of plaintiff’s attorneys, request you to please tell me what you knew about tbe case — what *577yon saw, if anything — and did not yon. refuse to do so, stating to me that yon would not tell anything about it until you were put on the stand? And then did I not ask you in the same conversation if you had not made a statement for the defendant company, and you answered that you had? Then didn’t I ask you why it was that you would make one for the street car company, and not do so for this old man, the plaintiff?” The last subdivision of the question was clearly objectionable, as being but the repetition of an argument made by plaintiff’s counsel to the witness before he was put on the stand. However, the question was objected to, as a whole, by the defendant’s counsel, and that only on the ground that it called for immaterial, irrelevant, incompetent, and illegal testimony; and the court correctly overruled the objection, if any portion of the testimony sought to be elicited was not subject to the grounds of the objection as stated.

The situation' of a witness, his relations with the party calling him, his zeal, bias, or partiality, as shown by his conduct for the party who calls him, is a proper matter for the consideration of the jury in estimating the value of and weight to be given his testimony; and it is a general rule that on cross-examination any fact may be elicited which tends to show such bias or partiality. Here it was shown that the witness, not in the employ of nor in any Avay connected with the defendant company, went up into their office and made them a statement of what he knew about the accident, and that morning repeated the statement to defendant’s counsel, but declined to make any at all for the plaintiff or to inform him in any way of what he knew about it, even upon request. Whether this was due to a sympathy or o leaning of the mind of the witness in favor of the defendant, or antipathy to the plaintiff, or neither, was *578for the jury; but it was at least a circumstance, if'unexplained, tending to support an inference of bias; and the objection to the question, having for its aim the bringing out of such evidence, was properly overruled.

All the written charges given at the request of the plaintiff, the giving of each of which is separately and severally assigned here by the defendant as error, were approved by our Supreme Court in the case of Birmingham Railway, L. & P. Co. v. Ryan, 148 Ala. 71, 41 South. 616, on a similar state of facts.

The defendant excepted to and assigns as error the following portion of the court’s oral charge: “It was the duty of the motorman to keep a constant and diligent lookout for persons or things on the track; and if the jury are reasonably satisfied from the evidence that the motorman, by keeping such constant and diligent lookout, could have seen the exposed condition and danger of the person on or near the track in time to have avoided injuring the plaintiff, by the exercise of reasonable care, then the laAV charges the motorman with seeing the exposed condition of the plaintiff within the- time he could have stopped the car, whether he saw1' him or not.” This is a substantial and almost literal duplicate of a charge approved by our Supreme Court in the case of Birmingham Railway, L. & P. Co. v. Brantley, 141 Ala. 615, 37 South. 698. But in the later case of Anniston Electric & Gas. Co. v. Rosen, 159 Ala. 207, 48 South. 798, 133 Am. St. Rep. 32, that court condemned the principle declared in the latter part of the charge to the effect that, since the duty to keep a diligent lookout was on the motorman, the “law charges the motorman with seeing the exposed condition of the plaintiff, * * * whether he saw him or not.” For reasons there pointed out at length, the court erred in giving it here.

*579The defendant requested a charge to the effect that, if the jury believe the evidence, they cannot award the plaintiff any damages for the purpose of punishing the defendant, which charge was refused. A proper consideration of this question necessitates here a review, of the evidence.

The plaintiff is a deaf and dumb man; but it is not even contended that this fact was known to the defendant’s servant or agent in charge or control of the car. He had, however, without dispute, the faculty of sight. He was the only witness examined in his own behalf. It appears that IVentieth street, where the accident occurred, runs north and south, and that on and along it there are parallel tracks of the defendant company. The plaintiff was on the west side of the street at the Model Restaurant, and, at a point not a street crossing, started across to the east side to Collier’s Drug Store. He came on and across one of the defendant company’s tracks behind a car on it going south, and from it, across the five-foot space between it and the next track, to the next track, where he was struck in the right side by the left corner of a car going north. He says: “I did not see the car before it struck me.- I did not stop before going on the track. I did not look before going on the track.” His own testimony makes out a clear case of contributory negligence. — Blaney v. Electric Trac. Co., 184 Pa. 524, 39 Atl. 294. There is no dispute but what there was an experienced motorman in charge of the car; that the track was level, and, at the time of the accident, the car was “coasting” or “drifting” at the rate of about three miles an hour, with the current off, and most of the slack out of the chain of the hand brake, so that the car could be the more readily stopped; and that it could have been stopped in a distance of about four feet. The motorman testifies, *580without dispute, that he was keeping a steady lookout ahead, and first saw the plaintiff: after the car pulled across and left First avenue, and when he was in about three car lengths of the plaintiff, at which time the plaintiff was on the track west and to the left of the track on which the motorman’s car was moving, and going obliquely north toward the track on which the car was moving, with his back partly turned towards the car; that he (the motorman), not knowing the plaintiff was deaf and dumb, commenced to ring the gong as soon as he saw him and kept ringing it until the car hit the plaintiff; that, when the car got in about one length of the plaintiff, he seemed to be walking straight north between the two parallel tracks a safe distance from the track on Avhich the car was going, and was a safe distance from the track until the car was right on him; that, when he saw that plaintiff would come in contact with the car, he immediately applied the brakes and stopped the car with one stroke, which was as soon as he possibly could, and within less than four feet, but not until it had hit the plaintiff in the right side and knocked him down after he was partly on the track.

The plaintiff’s counsel do not contend that there was any willful or wanton wrong so far, hut base their claim for it on the subsequent conduct of the motorman in backing the car in his attempt to extricate the plaintiff from his position under the fender of the car. The only testimony for the plaintiff on this subject is to the effect that although he was knocked down by the car striking him originally, and his head, as a result, hit the street, yet the dragging of him back while backing the car off of him is what injured him; that the car was backed about five feet or more; that by this he was hurt in the arm, body, leg, hip, knee, and side, but did not bleed any; that he was treated at the hospital by two *581doctors, used cru.tcb.es about a month, and lost about 'six months from work. The motorman testified that, when he stopped the car after striking the plaintiff, plaintiff’s legs were under the car and part of his body, between the shoulders and hips, under the fender; that plaintiff was holloing, and he backed the car probably two or three feet to get the fender off of plaintiff’s body; that it slid off as he backed the car back, and plaintiff was not dragged by the backing of the car; that he knew that plaintiff’s body did not extend far enough under the car for any part of it to be under the wheels; that the fender was made of steel and would weigh some 40 or 50 pounds, with a 2%-inch pipe around its base, so made that it would roll off of an object under.it; that the fender wás attached to the car in such a way that it would lift up some inches — he did not know how many — when it runs upon an object on a slant; that, as soon as he got the car backed off of the plaintiff, he immediately alighted and went to plaintiff’s assistance.

While the fact, as testified to by the motorman, that the fender could be lifted up some inches furnishes an inference that he could have gotten off the car, lifted the fender to this extent, and called for the aid of some one to pull the plaintiff out from under it, yet the means he selected of relieving plaintiff of the weight on his body of this fender by backing the car was certainly the most speedy one — a consideration highly important to the plaintiff in his painful position; a means, too, not ordinarily calculated in its employment to injure plaintiff, on account of the known construction of the fender, so made as to roll off of an object, as testified to; and one that would naturally appeal to a person in the position of the motorman, when confronted with the sudden emergency and the apparent necessity *582for prompt action that faced him. He may have erred in judgment as to- the best means of accomplishing the purpose desired, but his act hears no element of wantonness or willful wrong, and' we are of opinion there is nothing in the evidence from which the jury could infer such; hence the charge mentioned should have been given.

■ A mere error of judgment as to the result of doing an act or the omission of an act, having no evil purpose or intent or consciousness of probable injury, may constitute simple negligence, but cannot, rise to the degree of wanton negligence or willful wrong.- — Birmingham Ry. & Electric Co. v. Bowers, 110 Ala. 381, 20 South. 345. Unless there was a purpose to inflict the injury, it cannot be said to have been willfully or intentionally done; and unless an act is done, or omitted to he done, under circumstances and conditions known to the person, that his conduct is likely to, or probably wall, result in injury, and, through reckless indifference to consequences, he consciously and intentionally does or omits the act, the injury cannot be said to be wantonly inflicted. — Memphis & Charleston R. R. Co. v. Martin, 117 Ala. 382, 23 South. 231. The evidence is probably sufficient to warrant a reference to the jury of the question of simple negligence vel non.

We deem it unnecessary to discuss the other points in the record, since they are not likely to arise on another trial. For the errors pointed out, the judgment is reversed.

Reversed and remanded.

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