75 Ala. 312 | Ala. | 1883
The rule laid down by the‘court for the guidance of the jury was, in our judgment, correct as to the degree of care required of the defendants and their employees, in the act of driving or managing the steer, from which the plaintiff received his injury. This is stated to be “ such care as men of ordinary prudence and caution would have exercised under similar circumstances.''’
We do not understand this instruction to attach any rigid and unelastic meaning to the phrase “ ordinary prudence and caution,” which is but a synonym for ordinary care. Care and negligence are terms entirely relative, varying in degree with every possible change of circumstances. It is manifest that “ ordinary care” may mean very slight care in one state of circumstances, and comparatively very great care in another. One may drive a vehicle over a country road at a rapid rate of speed, and yet be free from every imputation of negligence, while, if he drive at the same rate through the streets of a populous city,
It is insisted that the court erred in not defining the degree of care required of the defendants, to be such care as men of ordinary prudence and caution should have exercised under similar circumstances. The words should and would each evidently import the same meaning in this connection, the best authorities using them interchangeably. The measure of care-exacted is in accordance with what prudent and cautious men usually do in like circumstances, and upon failure to do which, they are no longer entitled to be called prudent and cautious. Hence, it may be said that they “ would ” or “ would not ” do something which the particular exigency required. Shear. & Redf. Negl. § 7; Blyth v. Birmingham, Waterworks Co., 11 Exch. 781.
The business of defendants was that of dealers in cattle, frequently involving the duty of driving and delivery. This was an ordinary business, as ancient perhaps as the oldest phases of commercial traffic. It required no extraordinary skill, and was properly carried on through the agency of employees, who could afford to pursue it only, perhaps, because unfitted for the higher and more profitable vocations of life. The principals could scarcely be chargeable with culpable negligence, so long as the agents continue to discharge the duties imposed upon them by the exercise of ordinary care — such as was usually exercised by prudent and cautious men engaged in the like business under like circumstances. The law would be unreasonable in its demands to exact more.
The accident in the present case was produced by an extraordinary and abnormal phase of the defendants’ business — one which the exercise of ordinary skill or foresight might not have anticipated. “No one is ordinarily guilty of culpable negligence by reason of failing to take precautions which no other man would be likely to take under the same circumstances.” Shear. & Redf. Negl. § 6 ; Blyth v. Birmingham Waterworks
The charge of the court was correct, and the judgment is affirmed.