94 Ala. 581 | Ala. | 1891
That these adjudications establish that there can be no recovery in such cases for the mere negligent failure to see the trespasser in time to avoid injuring him, can not be doubted. A duty for a violation of which no redress is afforded is an anomaly; it can not in any legal sense be said to be a duty at all. Hence it must be that train-men are under no duty to keep a lookout for such persons, since confessedly their failure to do so involves no liability upon their employers, and warrants no redress to the injured persons in consequence of such failure. And the principle declared in Donovan's Case must be confined to persons exercising the undoubted but qualified right to cross a railroad track. For such persons a lookout must be maintained, since they are in no sense trespassers, having always the right to pass over the track, and doing so, -when due care is observed by them, not at their own peril, but upon the implication that the company will, in recognition of their right, keep a lookout for them, and conserve their safety. Persons travelling on the track, having under no circumstances a right to do so, can never assume that railroad employés will be on the alert to discover them in their wrong-doing. The latter are authorized to presume that the road-bed will not be thus wrongfully intruded upon and used, and are justified in acting upon this presumption. It is only when the presumption of the absence of trespassers is displaced by the knowledge of their presence, that the duty to observe all reasonable care and prudence to avoid injuring them arises and is upon train-men.
The foregoing considerations determine all the questions reserved on both appeals against the respective appellants; and the judgment on each appeal is affirmed.