43 So. 723 | Ala. | 1907
This was an action by the appellee against the appellant for damages for the death of two horses and three mules, the property of the plaintiff, which, it is claimed, were killed by reason of the negligence of defendant’s agents in managing its locomotive. The only assignments of error insisted on by appellant relate to the action of the court in giving certain charges at the request of the plaintiff.
According to the bill of exceptions, “the plaintiff offered evidence tending to show that it owned two horses and three mules”; that said animals came out in front of the engine, and were struck by it, two of the mules being knocked into the creek and injured, “and the other three killed upon the bridge”; and the injured animals were killed by the president of the Humane Society. The accident occurred about 12 o’clock at night, and “plaintiff’s only eyewitness to the actual collision with the stock testified that he was standing about 300 yards away,” and it is not stated what he testified to. The defendant’s engineer testified that he was keeping a constant lookout ahead, and when his engine got within 42 to 50 feet of One Mile Bridge he saw three head of stock about 30 feet in front of him, two.upon the track and two feeding along the edge; that the engine struck one horse and ran over one mule, and stopped about the middle of tlm bridge; that one horse fell through the bridge; and that he saw a mule in the water, but had not seen it until his engine stopped. Under this evidence it was a question for the jury to decide whether or not the stock belonged to the plaintiff, and whether the horse which fell through the bridge and the mule, which was seen in the water were injured by the locomotive, and, if injured, to what extent. Hence the court erred in assuming that this had been proved, and giving charge 1 at the request of the plaintiff.—McDougal's Adm’r v. Rutherford, 30 Ala. 253, 260; McKenzie v. Br. Bak., 28 Ala 606, 611, 65 Am. Dec. 369; Brooks v. Hildreth & Moseley, 22 Ala 470, 473.
This is an answer, also, to the contention of the appellee that, because the defendant failed to comply with the requirements of the statute in regard to obstructions on the track, therefore the plaintiff was entitled to the general charge, and all errors were without injury. Another objection to the general charge is that the evidence is entirely inconclusive as to the injury to the two animals which fell into the creek.
In the case now under consideration the action was for negligence, and the question is simply whether evidence of the' ordinance may be considered in arriving at the determination of negligence ve.l non, in the absence of any allegation in regard to the ordinance.. The writer confesses that, if it were a new question, he .would be disposed to require more specific allegations in regard to negligence, yet if is settled by former adjudications that very general averments, “little short of legal conclusions',” are sufficient. The ordinance, in this case, was merely a fact bearing upon the question as to whether the defendant's agents were guilty of negligence.—Robertson v. Wabash, St. L. & Pac. Ry., 84 Mo. 119, 121; Goodwin v. Chicago, Rock Island, etc. Ry., 75 Mo. 73, 75, 76; Elyton Land Co. v. Mingea, 89 Ala. 521-530, 7 South. 666. The running of the locomotive at a greater rate of speed than that allowed by city ordinance has been held by this court to constitute negligence.—S. & N. Ala. R. R. v. Donovan, 84 Ala. 141, 147, 4 South. 142, and case cited; also Elyton Land Co. Case, supra. Hence, although the fifth charge requested by the. plaintiff might haw been mox’e clearly expressed, there was error in giving it.
As to the other suggestion, that in this case there ivas no evidence of disturbing causes which nullified the effect of the headlight, if that were the case it .would not be true, as stated in the charge, that the negligence mentioned proximately contributed to the injury. If defendant desired án explanation on this point, it could have requested an explanatory charge.
Counsel for appellee insists that, though some of the charges given at the request of plaintiff be “bad,” or “too broad,” yet, as all the charges must be construed together, if, taking them all together, the law be correctly stated, the court should not reverse because a single instruction, taken by itself, is too broad. The rulings in some other jurisdictions on this subject' are slightly different from our own. 1 Yet, under our' stat
The judgment of the court is reversed, and the cause remanded.