Count A of the amended complaint was this:
“Count A. Plaintiff, who is a minor and sues by her next friend, W. C. Kilgore, claims of the defendant the sum of $5,000 as damages, for that heretofore, to wit, on the 12th day of March, 1916, defendant was operating a streetcar line along Eleventh Avenue South, in the city of Birmingham, Jefferson county, Alabama, known as the Avenue B Loop Line, and plaintiff was attempting to cross Eleventh avеnue at the intersection of Sixteenth street, when the servant or agent of the defendant in charge of a motor car on said Avenue B Loop Line, in approaсhing Sixteenth street from the west, threw a glaring electric headlight east along said street, so that the plaintiff was blinded by said headlight, and a jitney bus in the charge and control of one Curtis Gordon, coming along Eleventh avenue from the east and approaching Sixteenth street at the same time struck plaintiff, and her right arm and right leg were badly sprained, and shе was severely bruised in many places on her body and limbs, and plaintiff was made to suffer great mental and physical pain and anguish in consequence of her said injuries.
“Plaintiff avеrs that her said injuries were proximately caused by reason of negligence of the defendant in this: That the servant or agent of the defendant, having the charge and contrоl of said motor car, while acting in the line and scope of his employment as such, knowing that a powerful electric headlight on *239 the front of said electric motor сar [which was approaching] along said street or public highway which would likely or probably blind pedestrians and automobile drivers passing along said highway, so that they could nоt see, negligently threw said electric headlight on and along said highway just as plaintiff was crossing said street and said jitney bus was approaching her, and so blinded her and the said Curtis Gordon, the driver of said bus, that neither saw the other, and she was struck by said automobile as aforesaid as a direct and proximate consequence of said negligent act оf defendant’s said servant or agent at said time and place.”
The case of Lowery v. Manhattan R. Co.,
There could be no serious contention for error in sustaining the demurrer to the other counts.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
