56 So. 756 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1911
This suit was brought by a negro woman against the appellant, which is a railway corporation and a common carrier of passengers, for damages for personal injuries which she alleges she received through the negligence of appellant’s servants while acting in the line of their employment, and while she was a passenger on one of appellant’s trains.
The appellee alleges in her complaint that, for a reward, the appellant undertook to carry her as a passenger from Montgomery to a station in Russell county, Ala., and that it did take her to said station. She further alleges and she testified at the trial that when she reached her station she undertook to get off the train, but that, while she was in the act of so doing, the train was negligently started on its journey, and that she was thereby thrown to the ground and badly bruised and inj ured.
There was a jury and a verdict in favor of appellee for $500. Thereupon the appellant, upon various grounds, moved the court to set aside the verdict, and to grant it a new trial. The court reduced the amount of the verdict to $300, overruled the motion to set aside the verdict, and rendered judgment for the appellee for said sum, and this appeal is prosecuted, to reverse that judgment.
The only ground of the motion Avhich Ave regard as of sufficient importance to discuss is that ground in which it is claimed that the evidence is so overwhelmingly against the right of the appellee to recover as to shock the conscience of the court, and convince it that, in rendering the verdict, the jury did the appellant a palpable Avrong.
It is true counsel for appellant insisted that the ver-' diet should be set aside because of newly discovered evidence, but there is nothing in that contention. All
The witness Kirkpatrick was examined, as above stated, during the tidal, and the fact that appellant neglected to thoroughly examine him constitutes no ground for setting aside the verdict. The trial was had in the city of Montgomery. The witness lived and had his office in Montgomery. If appellant had desired the witness to refresh his recollection by an examination of his books, the books could have been obtained during the trial, and from those books he could, as easily during the trial as afterwards, have refreshed his recollection and given the exact date on which he treated appellee. This Avas not done, and it is evident that the verdict should not he disturbed on that account.
If the appellee testified truthfully in the material parts of her testimony, she was entitled to recover; if not, she was not. She was impeached, and that tended to cast doubt upon her testimony. In addition to this, she was contradicted in many material parts of her testimony. It appears that she was injured by appellant, after dark on Saturday night, and the flagman, who,
In addition to this, it Avas shown conclusively on the trial that appellee appeared at a dance that night after she left the train; and three or four Avitnesses, some of Avhom Avere related to appellee, testified that they Avere Avith her that night and the next day, and that they not only did not notice that appellee Avas injured in any way, but that she made no complaint to them of any such injury Avhile she Avas Avith them on Saturday night and Sunday, or at any other time.
Appellee returned to Montgomery Monday morning, and the train on which she returned was in charge of the same flagman and conductor Avho had charge of it the Saturday night before. At this point in her testimony, the appellee is peculicwly and strongly corroborated by both the flagman and the conductor. The flagman testified, in substance, that as soon as the Avoman saw him on the train Monday morning she told him of her injuries of the Saturday night before, and that she bad been throAvn to the ground, because tbe train started before she had alighted from it, and that she had received injuries about her knees and hips. The flagman further testified that the woman offered to exhibit to him the said injuries, but he declined to make the examination. The conductor also testified that the woman told him that she had been injured on the Saturday night before, as stated above.
It further appeared from the testimony, beyond dispute, that the Avoman, on her arrival at Montgomery,
It was developed, also, during the trial,- that after the woman had made complaint that she had been injured the appellant sent a special agent to Russell county to see the parties with whom she stayed while she was there; and that all the witnesses who came from Russell county to testify.on behalf of appellant had done so upon the statement of appellant or its agents that they would receive free transportation from appellant to and from Montgomery, and in addition thereto their per diem for attending the court as witnesses in the case.
It is contended by appellant that the verdict of the jury was against the great weight of the testimony, and therefore that the jury were misled into rendering the verdict, either through sympathy for • appellee, or on account of prejudice against appellant. We find nothing in the evidence indicating that the jury possessed any particular sympathy for the appellee, or that they entertained any prejudice of any sort against the appellant. While a majority of the witnesses testified favorably to the appellant, nevertheless there was evidence in the case from which the jury, within their exclusive province, if they believed that evidence, had the right to find a verdict for the appellee. The judge who presided at the trial, as well as the jury, heard all of the witnesses and observed the demeanor of each upon the stand; and the fact that the court reduced the verdict from $500 to $300, and permitted the verdict to stand for that amount, weighs heavily with us as an indication that this judgment should not be disturbed.
The judgment- of the court below is affirmed.
Affirmed.