91 So. 473 | Ala. | 1921
It is unquestionably the law that, while negligence may be charged in general terms, facts must be averred sufficient to bring the plaintiff within the protection of the negligence charged; that is, must establish a duty owing by the defendant to the plaintiff to do or not to do the thing complained of as the proximate cause of the injury. For instance, if the plaintiff charges a railroad with negligently injuring him while upon its track, the complaint must bring him within the protection of the negligence charged by negativing the fact that he was a trespasser, or, if he sues for injuries received on a train through the negligence of the agents or servants operating same, he must aver that he was a passenger or occupied such a relation as to bring him within the protection of the negligence charged, etc.
We think, however, that count 16 of the complaint sufficiently brings the plaintiff within the protection of the negligence charged, which is leaving open a ditch or excavation in the street of the city without a proper warning signal and into which the plaintiff fell or stepped and was injured, and that his injury was proximately caused by the defendant's failure to place the signal at the place of danger. True, the complaint charges a failure to place a light and which would perhaps be more necessary and effective at night than in the daytime, but this is a question pertaining to the negligence, rather than relationship, and is a matter of proof, and not pleading, as the time when the injury occurred and whether or not it was light or dark goes to the establishment of the charge of a negligent failure to place the light and whether or not said failure was the proximate cause of the injury, as charged in the complaint. The averment of a negligent failure to place the light there carries with it a reasonable necessity for doing so, and, if conditions were such that there was no need for a light, or guards or other signals made the light unnecessary, these facts would refute the necessity for the light and defeat the establishment of proximate negligence as charged in the complaint. In other words, this court cannot hold, as matter of law, that the defendant owed the plaintiff no duty, even in the daytime, to place a light at the place in question. Of course, if the surroundings were such that the light was not necessary, then the plaintiff would fail in his proof of negligence as charged in the complaint, and whether it was light or dark went to the degree of care required and the establishment vel non of the negligence charged. We do not think that the trial court committed reversible error in overruling the defendant's demurrer to this count, and it therefore erred in granting a new trial upon this ground of the motion.
Moreover, if there was a failure to aver that the injury occurred at night and this was not essential to the statement of a cause of action, the undisputed proof showed that it was at night, and the overruling of the demurrer was without injury. Best Park Co. v Rollins,
It is undoubtedly true that we have held that in passing upon the action of the trial court in granting a new trial this court will not confine the inquiry to the sole ground upon which the motion was granted, but will affirm its action, notwithstanding it was not justified under the ground assigned, if it affirmatively appears from the record that it should have been granted upon some other ground included in the motion. It is also well settled that in reviewing the action of a trial court in granting a motion for a new trial this court indulges in the same presumption in favor of the ruling as when the motion is denied, and will not disturb the ruling unless it appears that the great weight of the evidence plainly and palpably supported the verdict that was so set aside. And if the trial court does not specify the ground, and the motion contains the ground that the verdict was contrary to the evidence, this court can infer that the ruling was based on said ground, and will indulge the presumption as above set forth in favor of said judgment, but it is neither sound nor logical to indulge such a presumption in favor of the trial court when its judgment negatives the fact that the ruling was based upon this ground of the motion.
The case of Choate v. A. G. S. R.,
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, the judgment setting aside the original judgment is vacated, the original judgment is reinstated, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
McCLELLAN, SOMERVILLE, and THOMAS, JJ., concur.