Central of Georgia Ry. Co. v. Faust

82 So. 36 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1919

Lead Opinion

BROWN, P. J.

[1] The court, at the request of the defendant^ gave the affirmative charge in its favor as to count 7 and also instructed the jury, in writing, that if they believed the evidence in the case they could not find the defendant guilty of wantonness. These charges eliminate from further consideration the issues as presented by counts 6, 7 and 10; and, if the (demurrers to these counts were improperly overruled, the ruling of the court was without injury to the defendant. This left in the case the simple negligence counts. The sufficiency of counts 1 and 4 are not questioned by any of the assignments of error.

[2] As to the eighth and ninth counts, the appellant, after assigning generally the action of the court in overruling the demurrers to these counts as error, made specific assignments predicated on the court’s ruling on grounds 1, 6, 7, 8, and 9 of the demurrer filed August 8, 1917, and ground 6 of the demurrer filed August 26, 1917. In argument the appellant only urges consideration by the court of these grounds of demurrer upon which the specific assignments of error are predicated. This, of course, was a waiver of 'the general assignments, and the court will not examine these. L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Holland, 178 Ala. 675, 55 South. 100.

[3] The grounds of demurrer above referred to, and upon which the specific assignments of error are predicated, in so far as they relate to counts 8 and 9, are manifestly general demurrers, and the court will not be put in error for overruling them. Code 1907, § 5340; Alabama Power Co. v. Holmes, 80 South. 736;1 Henley v. Bush, 33 Ala. 642; Chewning v. Knight, 16 Ala. App. 357, 77 South. 969; Denson v. Caddell, 201 Ala. 194, 77 South. 720.

[4] Though it be conceded that the railroad crossing here involved is not within the statute which imposes on the engineer in charge of a locomotive approaching a public road crossing on a curve “where he cannot see at least one-fourth of a mile ahead” the duty of approaching and passing such crossing at such speed as to prevent accident in the event of an obstruction on the crossing (Code 1907, § .5473), it fioes not follow as a matter of law that the defendant’s engine-men were not guilty of negligence in approaching the crossing at such high rate of speed that the speed could not be checked or the train stopped in time to avoid injury to a traveler in the exercise of ,his right to cross over the defendant’s tracks at such crossing. “The current of authority is that no rate of speed, reasonably nécessary to accomplish the purposes of rapid transportation of freight and passengers, and to make the usual and regular connection, amounts to negligence per se. * * * The rate of speed may become negligence by co-operation of attendant circumstances, and the locality of the crossing.” E. T., V. & Ga. R. R. Co. v. Deaver, 79 Ala. 220, 221. What would constitute the observance of due care and caution on approaching a crossing in open country where the enginemen had an unobstructed view of the crossing and the approach of the public road thereto might be negligence in approaching a crossing, where both the railroad and the public highway approached the crossing through a high cut for a considerable distance, and where the view of the trainmen is confined to the narrow space covered by the railroad tracks, and where the view of the traveler along the public highway is likewise obstructed.

[5] Regardless of the question as to whether the statutory signals were given under the evidence in this case, the question as to whether the defendant’s servants were guilty of negligence in approaching the public crossing at a high rate of speed was a question for the jury.

[6] The undisputed evidence showing that the train was going at such a rate of speed that it could not be stopped before it reached the crossing where the automobile had come upon the track and stopped, there is therefore no room for the application of “the last clear chance doctrine,” negligence after the discovery of peril, announced in many of our eases. L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Calvert, Adm’r, 172 Ala. 597, 55 South. 812.

[7] This leaves but two questions in the case: (1) Whether the defendant was guilty of simple negligence proximately causing the injury of which plaintiff complains, and under the evidence this was a question for the jury; and (2) whether the plaintiff was guilty of negligence which proximately contributed to the injury as pleaded in the defendant’s special plea of contributory negligence, setting up “that it was the duty of the plaintiff to stop, look, and listen before going upon or attempting to cross the defendant’s said track, and the defendant avers that the plaintiff did not stop and look and listen before going upon or attempting to cross said track, and the defendant avers that the negligence of the plaintiff in- this regard contributed proximately to produce the injuries complained of.” There is no contention in argument and no support in evidence that the plaintiff stopped the automobile before reaching the railroad track, and the undisputed evidence shows that it did not stop until the front wheels had passed over the first rail. These facts were testified to by the plaintiff himself. In a recent ease the Supreme Court, speaking by Anderson, C. J., reversing this court for not- apply*98ing the doctrine that it was the duty of a traveler to stop, look, and listen before going upon a railroad track, under the facts in that case said:

“It is well settled by a long line of decisions by this court that a person attempting to cross a railroad track on which cars and locomotives are liable to be moving must stop, look in both directions, and listen before going on the track. * * *

“This duty is absolute at any railroad crossing, whether in a city or the country, or whether the track crossed be the main line or a side track, and regardless of the frequency of passing trains, and, if a failure to discharge this duty was the proximate cause of injury, the traveler cannot recover as for simple initial negligence on the part of the railroad. Of course, we have held in a few cases, not that it was not the traveler’s duty to stop and to look and listen, but that he might be excused from this duty when he could not have performed same because of his inability to do so, for instance, where his team was running away, but when he can do so it is his absolute duty to observe this salutary rule of self-preservation, regardless of the time or place of crossing or of the schedule or infrequency of passing trains.” A. C. L. R. R. Co. v. Jones, 202 Ala. 222, 80 South. 44.

[8] The issue presented by the defendant’s special plea involves the affirmation of two facts essential to this defense, with the burden of proof resting on the defendant: (1) That the plaintiff failed to stop, or that he failed to look, or that he failed to listen, the failure to do either being sufficient to bar his right to recover damages resulting from simple, initial negligence on tbp part of the defendant if the other fact is present; and (2) that the failure of the plaintiff to stop, or look, or listen, proximately contributed — i. e., without the chain of causation being interrupted by §ome efficient intervening cause — to the injury of which the plaintiff complains. C. of Ga. R. R. Co. v. Hyatt, 151 Ala. 355, 43 South. 867; Thompson v. Duncan, 76 Ala. 334.

There are two phases of the evidence which required the submission of this issue to the jury. There is no evidence that the plaintiff failed to look for approaching trains as soon as the course of his vision was unobstructed, and there is no evidence that he failed to listen, but the undisputed evidence shows that he failed to stop. The evidence also shows that both the railroad tracks and the public highway approached this crossing through a deep cut; that the trainmen could not see the automobile approaching the tracks until it was within from 10 to 15 feet of the tracks, and that the driver of the car could not see the approaching train until the automobile was within 10 feet of the track; that besides the embankment forming the cut through which the public highway approached the crossing the view from the public highway was obstructed by the defendant's “box car depot,” located in the cut near the crossing. There was evidence tending to show that if the plaintiff had proceeded in his course across the railroad tracks without attempting to stop the automobile, he had sufficient time to pass over and clear this crossing before the train reached that point. In this connection it was shown that after the automobile ran upon the tracks and stopped the four occupants had time to disembark therefrom before the train reached the crossing. There was also evidence tending to show that the plaintiff had been accustomed to driving a Ford automobile ; that he had recently purchased the car in. question, an Overland, and that as plaintiff was approaching the track at the rate of from five to seven miles per hour, and before he reached the point where his view of the track was unobstructed, one of the occupants of the car remarked that the way was clear, or that there was no train coming, and about this time the automobile had reached the point where the plaintiff could see the approaching train, and that he then looked both ways, and on his discovery of the approaching train he did not proceed across the track as he might have done with safety; that the approaching train and its proximity to the crossing caused him to lose presence of mind, and he became confused as to the use of the appliances for the control and operation of the car, and in attempting to stop the car or reverse it he used the wrong appliance, with' the result that he lost control of the automobile, and the motor was “choked”, or “killed,” and before he could regain control the front wheels of the automobile passed over the first rail and the automobile came to a dead stop.

[9,10] If this phase of the evidence illustrated the true state of facts — and this was for the jury — the chain of causation arising from the failure of the plaintiff to stop the automobile before attempting to go on the track was broken, and this became the remote and'not the proximate cause contributing to produce the injury. C. of Ga. R. R. Co. v. Hyatt, supra; Southern Ry. Co. v. Jones, 143 Ala. 334, 39 South. 118; Montgomery Gaslight Co. v. Eufaula Railway, Co., 86 Ala. 376, 5 South. 735; 10 Ency. Dig. of Ala. Repts. (Michie), p. 582, § 38.

[11] From the evidence it is manifest that if the plaintiff had stopped short of where he was when he looked and discovered the train, he would not have been in position to look up and down the track because of the intervening obstructions to his view. Therefore he had a right, and it was his duty, to proceed to this point where he could see, if thereby he was not imperiled. C. of Ga. R. R. Co. v. Barnett, 151 Ala. 407, 44 South. 392.

[12] If when he got to this point he lost presence of mind because of the proximity of. *99the train and the high rate of speed at which it was approaching the crossing without giving the statutory signals of its approach — as the jury had a right to find — and by reason of this fact and the attendant circumstances he lost control of the car and was thereby put in a position of peril by reason of the defendant’s negligence, another familiar principle of law is applicable to the case, i. e., “where by the negligence of the employer, or those for whom he is responsible, the plaintiff has been suddenly placed in a position of extreme peril, and thereupon does an act which under the circumstances known to him he might reasonably think proper, but which those who have a knowledge of all the facts, and time to consider them, are able to see was not in fact the best, the employer cannot insist that under the circumstances the plaintiff has been guilty of negligence. ‘Perfect presence of mind, accurate judgment, and promptitude under all circumstances are not to be expected. * * * You have no right to expect men to be something more than ordinary men.’ ” Woodward Iron Co. v. Andrews, 114 Ala. 243, 259, 21 South. 440, 444.

[13] We reiterate it was open for the jury to find under the evidence that the defendant’s trainmen approached the crossing involved in this case, which was located in a village and in a deep cut, at a high rate of speed, without giving the signals required by statute and that if such signals had been given the plaintiff could have located or determined the proximity of the train to the crossing and continued his course and passed over the tracks before the train reached the crossing; and under some of the phases of the evidence, it was also a question for the jury as to whether the plaintiff’s failure to stop the automobile before it reached the railroad track proximately contributed to the injury. The affirmative charge was properly refused. Charge 4 was also properly refused for' pretermitting the inquiry as to whether plaintiff’s failure to stop proximately contributed to the injury. C. of Ga. Ry. Co. v. Hyatt, supra; A. C. L. R. R. Co. v. Jones, supra.

[14] There was evidence in the case which, if believed, authorized the conclusion reached by the jury in their verdict, and the motion for a new trial was properly overruled. Southern Ry. Co. v. Kirsch, 150 Ala. 659, 43 South. 796. We find no reversible error in the record, and the judgment is affirmed.

Affirmed.






Lead Opinion

The court, at the request of the defendant, gave the affirmative charge in its favor as to count 7 and also instructed the jury, in writing, that if they believed the evidence in the case they could not find the defendant guilty of wantonness. These charges eliminate from further consideration the issues as presented by counts 6, 7 and 10; and, if the demurrers to these counts were improperly overruled, the ruling of the court was without injury to the defendant. This left in the case the simple negligence counts. The sufficiency of counts 1 and 4 are not questioned by any of the assignments of error.

As to the eighth and ninth counts, the appellant, after assigning generally the action of the court in overruling the demurrers to these counts as error, made specific assignments predicated on the court's ruling on grounds 1, 6, 7, 8, and 9 of the demurrer filed August 8, 1917, and ground 6 of the demurrer filed August 26, 1917. In argument the appellant only urges consideration by the court of these grounds of demurrer upon which the specific assignments of error are predicated. This, of course, was a waiver of the general assignments, and the court will not examine these. L. N. R. R. Co. v. Holland,173 Ala. 675, 55 So. 100.

The grounds of demurrer above referred to, and upon which the specific assignments of error are predicated, in so far as they relate to counts 8 and 9, are manifestly general demurrers, and the court will not be put in error for overruling them. Code 1907, § 5340; Alabama Power Co. v. Holmes, 80 So. 736;1 Henley v. Bush, 33 Ala. 642; Chewning v. Knight, 16 Ala. App. 357,77 So. 969; Denson v. Caddell, 201 Ala. 194, 77 So. 720.

Though it be conceded that the railroad crossing here involved is not within the statute which imposes on the engineer in charge of a locomotive approaching a public road crossing on a curve "where he cannot see at least one-fourth of a mile ahead" the duty of approaching and passing such crossing at such speed as to prevent accident in the event of an obstruction on the crossing (Code 1907, § 5473), it does not follow as a matter of law that the defendant's enginemen were not guilty of negligence in approaching the crossing at such high rate of speed that the speed could not be checked or the train stopped in time to avoid injury to a traveler in the exercise of his right to cross over the defendant's tracks at such crossing. "The current of authority is that no rate of speed, reasonably necessary to accomplish the purposes of rapid transportation of freight and passengers, and to make the usual and regular connection, amounts to negligence per se. * * * The rate of speed may become negligence by co-operation of attendant circumstances, and the locality of the crossing." E. T., V. Ga. R. R. Co. v. Deaver, 79 Ala. 220, 221. What would constitute the observance of due care and caution on approaching a crossing in open country where the enginemen had an unobstructed view of the crossing and the approach of the public road thereto might be negligence in approaching a crossing, where both the railroad and the public highway approached the crossing through a high cut for a considerable distance, and where the view of the trainmen is confined to the narrow space covered by the railroad tracks, and where the view of the traveler along the public highway is likewise obstructed.

Regardless of the question as to whether the statutory signals were given under the evidence in this case, the question as to whether the defendant's servants were guilty of negligence in approaching the public crossing at a high rate of speed was a question for the jury.

The undisputed evidence showing that the train was going at such a rate of speed that it could not be stopped before it reached the crossing where the automobile had come upon the track and stopped, there is therefore no room for the application of "the last clear chance doctrine," negligence after the discovery of peril, announced in many of our cases. L. N. R. R. Co. v. Calvert, Adm'r, 172 Ala. 597, 55 So. 812.

This leaves but two questions in the case: (1) Whether the defendant was guilty of simple negligence proximately causing the injury of which plaintiff complains, and under the evidence this was a question for the jury; and (2) whether the plaintiff was guilty of negligence which proximately contributed to the injury as pleaded in the defendant's special plea of contributory negligence, setting up "that it was the duty of the plaintiff to stop, look, and listen before going upon or attempting to cross the defendant's said track, and the defendant avers that the plaintiff did not stop and look and listen before going upon or attempting to cross said track, and the defendant avers that the negligence of the plaintiff in this regard contributed proximately to produce the injuries complained of." There is no contention in argument and no support in evidence that the plaintiff stopped the automobile before reaching the railroad track, and the undisputed evidence shows that it did not stop until the front wheels had passed over the first rail. These facts were testified to by the plaintiff himself. In a recent case the Supreme Court, speaking by Anderson, C.J., reversing this court for not applying *98 the doctrine that it was the duty of a traveler to stop, look, and listen before going upon a railroad track, under the facts in that case said:

"It is well settled by a long line of decisions by this court that a person attempting to cross a railroad track on which cars and locomotives are liable to be moving must stop, look in both directions, and listen before going on the track. * * *

"This duty is absolute at any railroad crossing, whether in a city or the country, or whether the track crossed be the main line or a side track, and regardless of the frequency of passing trains, and, if a failure to discharge this duty was the proximate cause of injury, the traveler cannot recover as for simple initial negligence on the part of the railroad. Of course, we have held in a few cases, not that it was not the traveler's duty to stop and to look and listen, but that he might be excused from this duty when he could not have performed same because of his inability to do so, for instance, where his team was running away, but when he can do so it is his absolute duty to observe this salutary rule of self-preservation, regardless of the time or place of crossing or of the schedule or infrequency of passing trains." A. C. L. R. R. Co. v. Jones, 202 Ala. 222, 80 So. 44.

The issue presented by the defendant's special plea involves the affirmation of two facts essential to this defense, with the burden of proof resting on the defendant: (1) That the plaintiff failed to stop, or that he failed to look, or that he failed to listen, the failure to do either being sufficient to bar his right to recover damages resulting from simple, initial negligence on the part of the defendant if the other fact is present; and (2) that the failure of the plaintiff to stop, or look, or listen, proximately contributed — i. e., without the chain of causation being interrupted by some efficient intervening cause — to the injury of which the plaintiff complains. C. of Ga. R. R. Co. v. Hyatt, 151 Ala. 355,43 So. 867; Thompson v. Duncan, 76 Ala. 334.

There are two phases of the evidence which required the submission of this issue to the jury. There is no evidence that the plaintiff failed to look for approaching trains as soon as the course of his vision was unobstructed, and there is no evidence that he failed to listen, but the undisputed evidence shows that he failed to stop. The evidence also shows that both the railroad tracks and the public highway approached this crossing through a deep cut; that the trainmen could not see the automobile approaching the tracks until it was within from 10 to 15 feet of the tracks, and that the driver of the car could not see the approaching train until the automobile was within 10 feet of the track; that besides the embankment forming the cut through which the public highway approached the crossing the view from the public highway was obstructed by the defendant's "box car depot," located in the cut near the crossing. There was evidence tending to show that if the plaintiff had proceeded in his course across the railroad tracks without attempting to stop the automobile, he had sufficient time to pass over and clear this crossing before the train reached that point. In this connection it was shown that after the automobile ran upon the tracks and stopped the four occupants had time to disembark therefrom before the train reached the crossing. There was also evidence tending to show that the plaintiff had been accustomed to driving a Ford automobile; that he had recently purchased the car in question, an Overland, and that as plaintiff was approaching the track at the rate of from five to seven miles per hour, and before he reached the point where his view of the track was unobstructed, one of the occupants of the car remarked that the way was clear, or that there was no train coming, and about this time the automobile had reached the point where the plaintiff could see the approaching train, and that he then looked both ways, and on his discovery of the approaching train he did not proceed across the track as he might have done with safety; that the approaching train and its proximity to the crossing caused him to lose presence of mind, and he became confused as to the use of the appliances for the control and operation of the car, and in attempting to stop the car or reverse it he used the wrong appliance, with the result that he lost control of the automobile, and the motor was "choked", or "killed," and before he could regain control the front wheels of the automobile passed over the first rail and the automobile came to a dead stop.

If this phase of the evidence illustrated the true state of facts — and this was for the jury — the chain of causation arising from the failure of the plaintiff to stop the automobile before attempting to go on the track was broken, and this became the remote and not the proximate cause contributing to produce the injury. C. of Ga. R. R. Co. v. Hyatt, supra; Southern Ry. Co. v. Jones, 143 Ala. 334, 39 So. 118; Montgomery Gaslight Co. v. Eufaula Railway Co., 86 Ala. 376,5 So. 735; 10 Ency. Dig. of Ala. Repts. (Michie), p. 582, § 38.

From the evidence it is manifest that if the plaintiff had stopped short of where he was when he looked and discovered the train, he would not have been in position to look up and down the track because of the intervening obstructions to his view. Therefore he had a right, and it was his duty, to proceed to this point where he could see, if thereby he was not imperiled. C. of Ga. R. R. Co. v. Barnett, 151 Ala. 407, 44 So. 392.

If when he got to this point he lost presence of mind because of the proximity of *99 the train and the high rate of speed at which it was approaching the crossing without giving the statutory signals of its approach — as the jury had a right to find — and by reason of this fact and the attendant circumstances he lost control of the car and was thereby put in a position of peril by reason of the defendant's negligence, another familiar principle of law is applicable to the case, i. e., "where by the negligence of the employer, or those for whom he is responsible, the plaintiff has been suddenly placed in a position of extreme peril, and thereupon does an act which under the circumstances known to him he might reasonably think proper, but which those who have a knowledge of all the facts, and time to consider them, are able to see was not in fact the best, the employer cannot insist that under the circumstances the plaintiff has been guilty of negligence. 'Perfect presence of mind, accurate judgment, and promptitude under all circumstances are not to be expected. * * * You have no right to expect men to be something more than ordinary men.' " Woodward Iron Co. v. Andrews, 114 Ala. 243, 259, 21 So. 440,444.

We reiterate it was open for the jury to find under the evidence that the defendant's trainmen approached the crossing involved in this case, which was located in a village and in a deep cut, at a high rate of speed, without giving the signals required by statute and that if such signals had been given the plaintiff could have located or determined the proximity of the train to the crossing and continued his course and passed over the tracks before the train reached the crossing; and under some of the phases of the evidence, it was also a question for the jury as to whether the plaintiff's failure to stop the automobile before it reached the railroad track proximately contributed to the injury. The affirmative charge was properly refused. Charge 4 was also properly refused for pretermitting the inquiry as to whether plaintiff's failure to stop proximately contributed to the injury. C. of Ga. Ry. Co. v. Hyatt, supra; A. C. L. R. R. Co. v. Jones, supra.

There was evidence in the case which, if believed, authorized the conclusion reached by the jury in their verdict, and the motion for a new trial was properly overruled. Southern Ry. Co. v. Kirsch, 150 Ala. 659, 43 So. 796. We find no reversible error in the record, and the judgment is affirmed.

Affirmed.

On Rehearing.
The conditions at the crossing where the collision between the defendant's locomotive and the plaintiff's automobile took place are peculiar and unusual. The defendant maintained its depot for receiving and discharging passengers and freight in a deep cut, through which the defendant's trains approached the road crossing, and the public road approached the defendant's track through a like cut. The embankments of these cuts obscured the view of the highway from the trainmen on one hand and the traveler's view of the tracks on the other, forming a trap, or blind, through which the traveler on the highway, unless the trainmen in charge of and operating trains over such crossings exercised a high degree of care, was, in effect, invited to his destruction. Can it be declared as a matter of law that to operate a train over such crossings at such a rate of speed that it is impossible to avoid collision with a traveler in the exercise of his right to use such crossing is not negligence? The authorities cited by appellant do not so hold. They relate to ordinary road crossings, where the view of the trainmen and the traveler are not so obstructed and they have no application to the facts in this case.

On the principle announced in E. T., V. G. R. R. Co. v. Deaver, 79 Ala. 221, under the evidence in this case, the question of negligence was one for the jury.

There is no evidence in this case that plaintiff made any effort to cross the tracks after discovering the train, but the evidence is to the contrary — that he undertook to stop the automobile, and in his efforts to stop it lost control of it, and it rolled upon the defendant's track. Under this evidence, there is no room for the application of the doctrine declared in Weaver v. A. G. S. R. R. Co., 200 Ala. 432, 76 So. 366, and M. C. R. R. Co. v. Martin, 117 Ala. 367, 23 So. 231:

"That one who discovers the imminent approach of a train moving at a dangerous rate of speed, and, measuring the distance to the crossing, attempts to beat the passage of the train and fails to his hurt, cannot recover for previous simple negligence of the railroad company."

The defendant's plea of contributory negligence avers "that the plaintiff did not stop, and look, and listen, before going upon, or attempting to cross, said tracks," and imposed on the defendant the burden of showing that the plaintiff voluntarily drove the car upon the railroad track or attempted to cross the track. Some of the evidence at least tends to show that the plaintiff made no such attempt, but that in his efforts to stop the automobile lost control of it and it rolled upon the track.

It cannot be doubted that when the driver of an automobile loses control of his machine that it is likely to become as dangerous as when the driver of a team loses control of such team, and makes applicable the exception to the general rule adverted to in Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Co. v. Jones, quoted in the original opinion.

Application overruled.

1 16 Ala. App. 633. *100






Rehearing

On Rehearing.

The conditions at the crossing where the collision between the defendant’s locomotive and the plaintiff’s automobile took place are peculiar and unusual. The defendant maintained its depot for receiving and discharging passengers and freight in a deep cut, through which the defendant’s trains approached the road crossing, and the public road approached the defendant’s track through a like cut. The embankments of these cuts obscured the view of the highway from the trainmen on one hand and the traveler’s view of the tracks on the other, forming a trap, or blind, through which 'the traveler on the highway, unless the trainmen in charge of and operating trains over such crossings exercised a high degree of care, was, in effect, invited to his destruction. Can it be declared as a rqatter of law that to operate a train over such crossings at such a rate of speed that it is impossible to avoid collision with a traveler in the exercise of his right to use such crossing is not negligence? The authorities cited by appellant do not so hold. They relate to ordinary road crossings, where the view of the trainmen and the traveler are not so obstructed and they have no application to the facts in this case.

On the principle announced in E. T., V. & G. R. R. Co. v. Deaver, 79 Ala. 221, under the evidence in this ease, the question of negligence was one for the jury.

There is no evidence in this case that plaintiff made any effort to cross the tracks after discovering the train, but the evidence is to the contrary- — that he undertook to stop the automobile, and in his efforts to stop it lost control of it, and it rolled upon the defendant’s track. Under this evidence, there is no room for the application of the doctrine declared in Weaver v. A. G. S. R. R. Co., 200 Ala. 432, 76 South, 366, and M. & C. R. R. Co. v. Martin, 117 Ala. 367, 23 South. 231:

“That one who discovers the imminent approach of a train moving at a dangerous rate of speed, and, measuring the distance to the crossing, attempts to beat the passage of the train and fails to his hurt, cannot recover for previous simple negligence of the railroad company.”

[15] The defendant’s plea of contributory negligence avers “that the plaintiff did not stop, and look, and listen, before going upon, or attempting to cross, said tracks,” and imposed on the defendant the burden of showing that the plaintiff voluntarily drove the' car upon the railroad track or attempted to cross the track. Some of the evidence at least tends to show 'that the plaintiff made no such attempt, but that in his efforts to stop the automobile lost control of it and it rolled upon the track.

It cannot be doubted that when the driver of an automobile loses control of his machine that it is likely to become as dangerous as when the driver of -a team loses control of such team, and makes applicable the exception to the general rule adverted to in Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Co. v. Jones, quoted in the original opinion.

Application overruled.