114 Ala. 492 | Ala. | 1896
The defendant in error, as administratrix, sued to recover damages for an unlawful injury to J. F. Anchors, which resulted in his death. Each of the ten counts of the complaint were demurred to by the defendant, and there were several grounds of each of
Apply these principles to the 10th count of the complaint. It avers that “defendant’s engineer, Robert Wallace, who had control of the running of the locomotive that propelled said train, wantonly or willfully failed to blow the whistle, or ring the bell at least one-fourth of a mile before reaching the regular station or stopping place at Anniston, and said engineer wantonly or willfully failed to continue to ring the bell or blow the whistle at short intervals until he had reached the said stopping place, and because of such willfulness or wantonness, the said passenger train of the defendant ran into and against a passenger car of the Oxford Lake Line at its crossing,” &c. Italics ours. Everything averred in this count might be true, and yet not show that the purpose of the defendant, in failing to ring the bell or blow the whistle, was to run into and against the passenger car of the Oxford Lake Line. As a count for willful injury it is defective. Nor does the count fiyer a
Construing the 6th count, our opinion is, the latter clause gives meaning and controls the preceding averments, and construed as a whole charges no more than that the death of plaintiff’s intestate resulted “by reason of ’ ’ the willful running of said train at a high rate of speed, but does not aver, that the intention or purpose
Section 1145 of the Code of 1886 provides as follows : “ When the tracks of two railroads cross each other, engineers and conductors must cause the trains of which they are in charge to come to a full stop within one hundred feet of such crossing, and not proceed until they know the way to be clear ; the train on the railroad having the older right of way being entitled to cross first.” The demurrer raises the question as to wdiether "the railroad of the Oxford Lake Line, an- electric railroad running from Anniston to a point beyond the corporate limits of the city, upon which the plaintiff’s intestate was conductor,” is a railroad within the meaning of said section 1145.
In the case of the Birmingham Min. R. R. Co. v. Jacobs, 92 Ala. 199, we had occasion to consider sections 1145 and 1173.. The question in that case Avas, whether railroads using dummy engines and operated beyond city limits are subject to these provisions. After careful deliberation, this court reached the conclusion that railroad corporations organized under and by virtue of sections 1918 and 1921 of the Code of 1886, as amended by act of February 25th, 1887, (Acts, 1886-87, p.144), were not strictly street railways, as contemplated in the statute providing for the organization and operation of street railroads, (sections 1603-1612 of the Code of 1886), and that railroads organized under the act of February 25th, supra, using dummy engines, were subject to said statutory provisions. The question now is, whether a railroad upon Avhich electricity is used as the moving power,
Reversed and remanded.