64 So. 581 | Ala. | 1914
Plaintiffs (appellants) sued for the value of a mule alleged to have been killed by the negligent operation of defendant’s train. Whatever may have been the pleader’s purpose in framing counts 1 and 2, and whatever the effect of those counts, demurrers to them were sustained, and the correctness of the rulings is not questioned in brief for appellants. The case was submitted to the jury on counts 3 and á, added by amendment, and in them there was no allegation of wanton, willful, or intentional wrong. The testimony went to show that defendant’s train, moving east, came upon plaintiffs’ double team-, going west, and drawing a wagon in a space between the railroad track and a log ramp. This ramp and its approach from the ground up extended along the railroad for 50 or 60 feet, and the space between is variously described, by one extreme of the evidence, as being about 10 feet wide or, by the other, as being so narrow that a wagon could barely drive there. The team got within the sweep of the approaching train, and the near mule was killed. This space or way along which the team was moving was in the neighborhood of, but was no part of, a public road or street. It was a part of defendant’s right of way. Without conceding that defendant owed to plaintiffs with respect to their property at that place any duty to give signals of approach, it may be stated that the evidence showed, without contradiction, that the customary and statutory signals of approach to a public road crossing were given.
The situation of plaintiffs’ agent, the driver in charge of the team, was strictly analogous to that of a licensee
Negligence subsequent to tbe actual discovery of persons in a place of danger on or near the track is provable under a complaint charging negligence generally, and, on such proof, the plaintiff in such case may recover. — L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Lowe, 158 Ala. 391, 48 South. 99. It results, from what has been said above, that no rate of speed in the ordinary operation of the train between stations could be held for negligence in respect to plaintiffs’ team in its situation so long as actually unknown to the engineer, and evidence of speed, without more, would have meant nothing; but, by a more or less involved process of inference, affected by many elements of the situation as it was on the ground and in the engineer’s cab, the opinion of plaintiffs’ witness Ward as to the speed at which the train was moving — such opinions being ordinarily competent— (Crocker’s Case, 95 Ala. 412, 11 South. 262) may have been relevant and in some degree material, in connection with other circumstances, and by way of comparison with the speed of the same train a few moments before, as tending to show whether defendant’s engineer, after discovering the danger, used proper diligence to avoid the impending contact with plaintiffs’ team. The question on which this ruling arose was asked at the outset of the case, and neither by itself nor in connection with anything else then appearing afforded a basis of comparison between the speed of the train at the very time of the accident and its speed when it first came into view of the witnesses, and perhaps, to put the court in error, the facts to be subsequently developed and which would make this opinion relevant to plaintiffs’ case should have been stated to the court by the proponent; but, be that as it may, such mere opinions,
Nor are we able to see how the court’s refusal to allow the witness Brown to testify that there were logs on the ramp operated to the prejudice of plaintiffs. While it was doubtless admissible for either party to prove this fact as an element of the situation which the jury were to consider, it so happened that, except for the objection and exception here in question, neither the fact itself nor its legal relevancy were put in issue, and the fact itself was abundantly proved without dispute by testimony offered by both parties. There seems to have been some difference as to whether the logs on the ramp may not have extended somewhat over the space between it and the railroad track, thus narrowing that space and adding to the danger of plaintiffs’ team, but the question as framed did not touch upon that point.
Coming now to the special charges given at the request of defendant, we find that some of them proceeded upon the idea that, as matter of law, on undisputed facts defendant was not liable, unless its engineer was guilty of willful or wanton wrong after discovering the
Reversed and remanded.