75 So. 22 | Ala. | 1917
This is an action for damages. The cause was submitted to the jury on one count. The demurrers to the count were properly overruled. Plaintiff's (appellee's) evidence tended to show that his cow had been missing for about a week. Its range was from plaintiff's home to a point across defendant's tracks. Plaintiff, being informed that something had been recently buried on defendant's right of way near the point where said cow, with other cows of the neighborhood, was accustomed to go, dug into the "grave" on the right of way (which was about eight or ten feet from defendant's railroad track), and discovered the carcasses of two cows, one being that of plaintiff's. The evidence tended further to show that plaintiff's cow was discovered shortly after another cow (one belonging to Dr. Wood) was killed at or about the same place. Dr. Wood's animal was described as being "a red cow," and defendant's cow as being "red or brown in color." There was evidence that at the point where the cows were buried there was, on the railroad track, hair "just the color of Will Hayward's [plaintiff's] cow." Defendant's evidence was to the effect that none of the cows so buried at the point in question on its right of way was that of the plaintiff, and that defendant knew nothing of having killed plaintiff's cow.
There was ample evidence to afford ground for the inference by the jury that the animal in question was killed by one of defendant's engines or trains, yet there was other evidence which would warrant a different view, hence a question for the jury was presented. Amerson v. Coronoa Coal Iron Co.,
There was no error in allowing witness, Dr. Wood, to testify whether he "saw anything else had been buried on the right of way," or "what kind of a looking place" it was. In Southern Railway Co. v. Proctor,
"Under a recognized modification of the general rule against admitting in evidence the opinions of ordinary witnesses, their conclusions as to the appearance of persons, animals, or things may be proved as being in their nature not mere opinions, but descriptive of facts. The law recognizes that ordinary witnesses as to such matters are not to be expected to be endowed with such powers of graphic description as to be able so to portray to the jury the subject of inquiry as to enable them to reach a conclusion as to its condition without the aid of the impression made upon or the conclusion reached by the witness who saw it." Jones on Ev. § 360; Smith v. State,
In McLendon's Case, supra, the witness was permitted to testify that the plaintiff "looked bad," "looked like the bone had slipped," "was disabled by the fall," etc. A witness was allowed to testify that the defendant did not appear to be drunk, and that he was transacting business (Sharp v. State,
The death or injury of an animal caused by a railroad train may be shown by circumstantial evidence, as any other evidential fact may be shown. S. N. A. R. R. Co. v. Small,
The issues presented by the pleading and the proof were properly defined to the jury in the court's oral charge and in the defendant's given charges. There was no error in overruling the motion for a new trial.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and MAYFIELD and SOMERVILLE, JJ., concur.