109 Ala. 636 | Ala. | 1895
This action sounds in damages for personal injuries resulting in the • death of plaintiff’s intestate. The complaint alleges that the defendant, the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, made or caused to be made, <fec., a deep or wide cut or excavation across a “regular roadway” which led from Birmingham and South Highlands, across Red Mountain, to the village of Clifton, on the opposite side of said mountain; that intestate, having no knowledge of this cut, proceeded along said roadway at night, and was killed by falling into this abyss. It is not averred that the act of the defendant in making this excavation was without authority of law or wrongful in any respect, but the wrong and negligence counted on for a recovery is laid in the fact that the defendant left said cut or excavation “open, without guard, signal or barrier of any kind whatever which would warn the public or persons who passed over said roadway of the impending danger.” The averment as to intestate’s knowledge is “that the said decedent knew nothing of said cut or excavation across said roadway, * * * but walked into the same in passing home from his work at night.” The averment in the first count as to defendant’s negligence and its damnifying results is this : “That defendant was guilty of gross negligence in making said cut or excavavation across said roadway, and leaving the same without guards or signal to warn the public and said decedent
The evidence showed that this roadway was not a public thoroughfare, but a bridle and foot path (over which, however, some of the witnesses had known wagons to pass) , which had been used for a great number of years by people in considerable numbers passing between Birmingham and Clifton, being a considerably shorter route than the public road between these points. It was also shown that the excavation referred to in the complaint had been cut across and some distance beyond the x’oad a week or two before intestate’s death, and that persons passing that way went out of the old road and around the end of the cut, thus tramping out a new pathway. This excavation was xxot guarded at any point, nor were there any barriers to prevent people walking into it, nor lights or other signals to mark its position. The evidence, without conflict, shows further, however, that Hix, the intestate, had passed along there after the cxxt had been made, and that as he and his companions approached it on the occasion of his death and when they were within forty or fifty feet of the point where it crossed the road, they stopped to rest, sat down, “and talked about it, its depth and the time it would, take to finish it.” Then proceeding to the cut, they turned out of the old road to pass around it and while going around the end of it, ten or fifteen fee* from the old road, Hix, walked or fell into the cut. This was about 10 o’clock on a star-lit night.
It is manifest that thex*e are on this state of averment and proof two variances between the complaint and the
But a safer basis for this conclusion is found in the evidence going to show contributory negligence on plaintiff's intestate. As we have seen, the decedent,Hix,had full knowledge of the location, depth, &c., of the excavation. We may concede that, although the defendant committed no wrong in making the excavation, it was, under the circumstances, negligent in leaving it unguarded at night by barriers, or lights or other signals to warn persons of its precise position. But, noth withstanding this negligenqe on the part of the defendant, a recovery should not be had in this case if Hix by the exercise of reasonable care and diligence could have avoided the disastrous result, because in such case the result is chargeable in part to the negligence of both parties, and the law affords no redress where the injury is of such a dual causation. Knowing the location of the pit and also knowing the defendant had left it unguarded and without lights or signals of warning, the duty was upon Hix to protect himself against the consequences of this negligence on the part of the defendant. If there was light enough for him to see and mark the lines of the excavation so as to avoid it, he must have negligently — inadvertently—omitted to use
Affirmed.