142 Ala. 298 | Ala. | 1904
The only caption of the complaint was that under Avhich the original counts Avere Avritten. To these several other counts were added but without further statement of the caption. This caption is as follows: “Mrs. Florence MattheAvs, Administratrix of the estate of Walter H. Matthews, deceased, versus The Kansas City, Memphis and Birmingham Railroad Company, a corporation.” There were six counts in the complaint as originally filed. In the first, fifth and sixth counts, the capacity in which plaintiff sues is thus stated: “The plaintiff, as administratrix of the estate of Walter MattheAvs,” etc., etc. In the second, third and fourth counts the capacity is shown by this averment: “The" plaintiff as aforesaid (i. e. as such administrator) claims” of the defendant, etc., etc. Thus the complaint stood undoubtedly as a suit by Mrs. Matthews in her capacity as administratrix of the estate of Walter H. MattheAvs, deceased, when she as such plaintiff asked leave to amend the complaint by adding thereto count 7. Upon this request the court’s order is this: “Florence MattheAvs, ais administratrix. of W. H. Matthews, deceased, v. Kansas City, M. & B. R. R. Co., February 5th, 1901. Damages. Leave granted plaintiff to file additional count No. 7 submitted on demurrers, and continued.” This amendment to the complaint is in the folloAAdng language: “7th count. The plaintiff claims of the defendant the further sum of thirty thousand dollars damages, for that Avhereas, on, to-wit: the 10th day of November, 1899, her intestate, the said Walter H. MattheAvs, was a passenger on the railroad of the defendant, which was railway corporation for the transportation of freight and passengers, on one of the passenger trains of defendant from Birmingham to Guin, Ala., the plaintiff alleges that on said date her intestate as such passenger was through and by the carelessness and negligence of the defendant’s servants, agents or employees, violently thrown, from the train, at or near said Guin, Alai., and so
This count by its averment that the intestate was a passenger on defendant’s train shows a duty resting on defendant to safely carry him. It shows too that the defendant did not safely carry him. There was need to show but one thing else in the sufficient statement of a cause of action. That thing was that the failure to carry him safely was due to the negligence of defendant’s servants. It is immaterial who the negligent servants were or what their particular stations or duties in the service were. The intestate having been injured by the negligence of a servant of the defendant, according to the averment, it is all the same as respects the rights of intestate’s estate and the liability of the defendant whether the negligent servant was a trainman, or a trackman, or a station man, or what not. The negligent act of a servant of the carrier whereby a passenger is thrown from the carrying train and injured is necessarily an act m and about and having a bearing (very decided indeed) upon the carriage- of the passenger, and as the act cannot be said to be negligently done unless the doing of it involves remission of duty on the pait of the servant owed to the passenger, the charge here is essentially none other than that through the neglect of duty due the passenger from defendant’s servant the passenger was violently thrown from the train, etc., etc. The carrier assumes to the passenger the duty of protecting him ■from the negligent acts — pretermissions of duty — of all its employes, and is liable upon any breach of this obligation. Hence our conclusion that the count states a cause of action though it does not in terms aver that the injury resulted from the defendant’s negligence, nor that the servants from whose negligence the injury is alleged to have resulted were in. charge of the train, or the like; and evidence having been adduced tending to show causal negligence on the part of defendant’s trainmen, the defendant was not entitled to the affirmative charge on the contrary theory. — M., K. C. M. & B. R. R. Co. v. Sanders, 98 Ala. 307-8.
The count showing the, duty of carrier by defendant to the intestate, and that he was injured by negligence on-the part of the carrier’s servants for which the defendant was responsible, it was not necessary for the quo modo of the infliction to be averred, certainly not with any more particularity than was used, viz.: that he “was violently thrown from the train.” Where, as in this case, the injuries are alleged to have caused the death of the passenger, and damages are claimed by the personal representative for the death, it is not necessary to describe the character of the hurts as it is to some extent where death does not ensue and the injured party himself sues for the damages he has sustained. The damnifying fact here is the death, and beyond showing the causal connection between the wrong and that result a description of the injuries is not necessary, since the damages recoverable do not depend upon any other characteristic or consequence of the injury than its fatality i A very usual form of averment in this class of cases is that “the intestate Avas thereby so injured that he died;” and the fact that death did not ensue immediately upon the injury being inflicted can have no bearing to require a further description of it. The averment here is in effect that the intestate Ava.s so greatly injured, bruised,, hurt and shocked by the injury he sustained from being violently thrown from the train that he never recovered from such injury, but soon thereafter died on account of it.' This is an averment to common understanding that he died from the injuries sustained by being thrown from the train, and is sufficient.
It is not necessarily negligence for a passenger to alight from a running train even in the night time and at a dark and unlighted place. It depends upon the speed with which the train is running. It may be running so slowly as to be as safe to alight as if it were
More than eight’months intervened between the date of the infliction of the injuries which plaintiff claims caused the death of her intestate and the date of his death. A prominent issue on the trial arose on the traverse of this claim. For the plaintiff it was sought to show that the injuries were of a serious and permanent nature, continuing unhealed and uncured to, and caused ■his death. For the defendant it was sought to show that the injuries were trivial in character and extent; that he had recovered from them long before his death, and that his death resulted from other and independent causes. To this issue, manifestly, the nature and extent of the intestate’s injuries and their continued effect upon him, were of the same pertinency as if he had not died, but living, had himself sued for damages resulting from the injuries: the character, extent and continuance of the injuries constitute a chief matter of inquiry in the former case as well as in the latter; in the latter on the question of the amount of damages sustained by him,
The circuit court did not err in overruling defendant’s motion to exclude the testimony of Mrs. Matthews that her husband, the injured man, Avas never able to do any manual labor after he was hurt.- — South & North Alabama Railroad Company v. McLendon, 63 Ala. 266.
The exception to the court’s refusal to give the affirmative charge against count 7, requested by defendant is sought here to be sustained on several grounds. One of these, viz, that the suit is by the plaintiff in her individual capacity and the proof does not show any cause of action in her individually, we have already adverted to, and held untenable.
Another ground insisted upon is that there was no evidence before the jury tending to sIioav that intestate’s death Avas caused by his being throAvn from the train to Avhich the complaint ascribes his death. It would serve no good purpose to go into a discussion of the evidence relating to this matter. It must suffice us to say that we find that there was evidence adduced before the jury tending to show that the fall from the train was the cause or a proximately contributory cause of intestate’s death.
Another insistence is that there was a fatal variance between the averment of this count and the proof in respect of the infliction of the alleged injuries upon Matthews. the intestate, — in respect of the quo modo of their infliction — in this, that while the court alleges that he “was violently thrown from the train, and so greatly in
It is further insisted that the affirmative charge •should have been given for defendant for that the evidence without conflict shows that Matthews was guilty of negligence which proximately contributed to his injury in attempting to get off the train when and as he did. We do not find this to be the fact. One phase of the evidence tends to show that his attempt to alight was made when the train had just started and was moving
Charge 3 refused to defendant is an apt illustration of the fact that much is said and properly said in the opinions of appellate courts which is not proper to be given in charge to juries. This excerpt from the opinion in East Tenn. Va. & Ga. Ry. Co. v. Holmes, 97 Ala. 332, is as applied to the case at bar, patiently abstract and argumentative ; and the same is true of charge 11. Charge 5 was properly refused on considerations adverted to above having reference to the issue of contributory negligence vel. non.
If the court erred in refusing the 7th charge requested by the defendant, the error was cured by the giving of defendant’s 46th charge Avhich Avas in substance and almost literally identical with charge 7.
Charges 10 and 16 refused to defendant were bad for failing to hypothesize that intestate’s negligence therein referred in point of fact contributed to Ms injury.
The evidential fact hypothesised in charge 9 as to MattheAvs being cautioned against making the attempt to alight did not demonstrate the negligence of such attempt : The question was still for the jury.
Judge Matthews’ death may have been directly caused
Charge 15 requested by defendant is a pure express argument.
We are not prepared to say that the verdict of the jury was so palpably against the evidence as to justify us in the conclusion that the court below erred in overruling the motion for a new trial.
Affirmed.