110 So. 718 | Ala. | 1926
The Action is in damages for killing plaintiff's horse in the negligent operation of a railway locomotive. The place of the accident is alleged in the complaint to be "in Shelby county, Ala., at or near Bamford, Ala." The demurrer challenges this as a sufficient designation of place.
The Code of 1876, § 1711, required the complaint to specify "the time when and the place where the killing or injury occurred." Construing this section, it was said:
"The place should be averred to be at a certain locality along the line of the road, describing its distance and direction from a named depot, or other known point." East Tennessee V. G. R. Co. v. Carloss,
This provision was repealed by omission from Code of 1886, § 1150, and later Codes. Western Ry. of Ala. v. Sistrunk,
In Southern R. Co. v. Hoge,
In Nashville, C. St. L. Ry. v. Bingham,
In Western Ry. of Ala. v. Stone,
In Western R. of Ala. v. McPherson,
In Louisville N. R. Co. v. Dumas,
Under this line of cases the complaint in the present case was sufficient.
In Western Railway of Ala. v. Turner,
"Good pleading should require a more specific designation of the place of killing the mule than is set out in counts 2 and 3 of the complaint, but this point, while argued, is not raised by the demurrers."
In Alabama G. S. R. Co. v. Sheffield,
"The defendant was not properly acquainted of the place of injury, so as to prepare the defense, as was pointed out in the Turner Case, supra."
In Louisville N. R. Co. v. Whitley,
Dealing with the matter on principle, the action being personal and transitory, the place of the accident is not an element of the cause of action. If special duties are enjoined at places named by statute, and liability based upon such statute, the complaint must bring the case within the statute by averment of place. Such is not the case here.
The averment of time and place, therefore, in actions of this sort is to identify the event or occurrence made the basis of the action in such manner as will give reasonable notice to defendant; such notice as will enable defendant to investigate his alleged liability, and prepare his defense, if any he has. This is the purpose of the averment recognized in our cases under the statute of 1876 and since its repeal.
Matters within the knowledge of defendant or of agents for whose acts it is answerable need not be averred with the same particularity as when peculiarly within the knowledge of plaintiff.
Our statutes require the section master on whose section live stock is killed or injured to promptly notify the owner, or, if unknown, a justice of the peace, and cause the value of stock killed, or the amount of the injury, to be assessed or appraised. Code, §§ 10004-10006. Certain duties in the disposal of the bodies of animals killed are prescribed by the sanitary laws. Code, § 3223. The trainmen are required to keep a lookout for live stock on the track.
In view of the knowledge thus imputed to defendant's agents, we think a complaint showing that a described animal was killed about a named date at or near a named station gives sufficient notice, and is not subject to demurrer for uncertainty as to place. It is not to be supposed that animals of like description are killed about the same date in a zone covered by a passing train within a short period of time in such numbers as to render it impractical to defend the particular case.
The Stone Case, supra, on all fours with the case at bar, has stood as the law unreversed for some 20 years. The Hoge and Bingham Cases approved less certain designations of place. We are not disposed to overrule this line of cases. See general rule elsewhere, 33 Cyc. 1260. Jefferson County Savings Bank v. Carland,
The cases of Alabama G. S. R. Co. v. Sheffield,
The suit was brought, and judgment recovered against "B. L. Bugg, as receiver for the Atlanta, Birmingham Atlantic Railway." The evidence tended to show the horse was killed by a locomotive operated over this railroad. The engineer whose negligence was relied upon testified that he was at the time in the employ of the "A., B. A."
Appellant here insists that the affirmative charge should have been given for failure to prove the defendant was receiver, was operating the road as such, and responsible for the negligence of trainmen. Prior to circuit court rules 34 and 35, it was held such variance or omission entitled defendant to an affirmative instruction. McGhee v. Cashin,
The cause was tried on the issue of liability vel non. No objection was made to the evidence tending to show a variance as to the party suable in the action; and the attention *346
of the trial court was not called to such variance or omission. The writer thinks the case comes within rules 34 and 35. B. F. Kay Son v. Ala. Cotton Grain Co.,
The case of Ferrell v. Ross,
Stress was laid upon the fact that the judgment ran against the property of the individual, subjecting his property to the payment of the debt of another. Here the judgment runs against the property of the railway company in either event. As rendered, it can be collected only as demands against receivers are collected. No question having been raised as to the receivership according to the rules, the trial court will not be put in error in assuming such fact was admitted.
In the companion case of Bugg, Receiver, etc., v. Meredith,
There was no such want of conflict in the evidence, and the inferences arising therefrom, as would warrant the giving of the affirmative charge for defendant; nor was the verdict so unsupported by the evidence as to call for a reversal of the ruling on motion for new trial.
Charge 4, refused to defendant, ignores the duty to keep a lookout.
Given charges 5, 9, and 18 fully cover the law of the case as applied to defendant's version of the facts.
Refused charges 12 and 13 invite a verdict on the weakness of plaintiff's evidence in identification of her horse as one of the killed. They are faulty in failing to cover all the facts on that point, such as the presence of the two horses in that neighborhood shortly before, the present disappearance of both, some evidence identifying the cropped foretop of plaintiff's horse, and the absence of evidence that any other horses than those were killed or missing. We find no reversible error in the rulings upon the admission of evidence.
All the Justices concur in the affirmance of the judgment, and concur in the opinion, except as hereinafter shown, viz.:
The majority, composed of ANDERSON, C. J., and SAYRE, SOMERVILLE, GARDNER, and MILLER, JJ., hold, and it is the decision of the court, that under the circumstances disclosed proof of the receivership was waived on the trial, and that affirmative charge, as for such failure of proof, was properly refused on the ground of waiver, and not by reason of circuit court rules 34 and 35.
Justices THOMAS and the writer take the view that these rules are based upon, and are expressive of, the doctrine of waiver in such cases.
The majority, composed of ANDERSON, C. J., SAYRE, SOMERVILLE, THOMAS, and MILLER, JJ., hold, and it is the decision of the court, that the case of Louisville N. R. Co. v. Whitley,
Justices GARDNER and the writer dissent from this view, and think the earlier cases should not be disturbed.
Affirmed.