92 So. 414 | Ala. | 1922
The suit, for personal injury caused by a collision between defendant's automobile and plaintiff's motorcycle, resulted in a judgment for defendant. The complaint consisted of counts of simple negligence and for wantonness; the pleas were the general issue and contributory negligence.
Assignments of error, not duly insisted upon in argument, will not be considered. Georgia Cotton Co. v. Lee,
General rules of the road have been long recognized, and additional or auxiliary provisions, deemed necessary by the Legislature, have been added to meet the increasing and complicated volume of traffic by the old and new methods of transportation thereon. Morrison v. Clark,
Such of the provisions of the act of 1911 (page 634) that are penal or in derogation of the common law must be strictly construed. 25 R. C. L. p. 1056, § 281. Whether the provisions of sections 18 and 19 of that act are liberally or strictly construed, they have application immediately preceding and at the point of the collision — to the locus in quo of the injury, outside the limits of a city or an incorporated village, and at a point where, from the direction in which plaintiff approached the intersection of two roads, the operator of the motorcycle (according to his own evidence) was prevented by obstructions from seeing the defendant approaching the same point driving west along another and different road from that on which plaintiff was driving. The provisions of sections 18 and 19 of the act will not be construed to apply only to two roads that approach and intersect at right angles. There was no error in giving, at defendant's request in writing, charge numbered 13.
Charge numbered 11 is challenged by assignment of error and argument. Plaintiff, immediately approaching the point of collision, was required to use reasonable care and to have his motorcycle under such control as to be able to stop it promptly by the use of due diligence and appliances. Whether or not plaintiff proved that he complied with the requirements of the law, and discharged his duty under the circumstances of his approach to the point of collision, was a question for the jury. The use of the words "reasonable distance" in charge 11, as descriptive of plaintiff's duty in the premises, under the surrounding circumstances, as to his mode, method, or control of the motor vehicle being driven to the point of *214 collision, did not render the charge unsusceptible of further explanation, if such was deemed necessary by counsel. Conceding that the proper test of the correctness of the charge was whether plaintiff used reasonable care in having his motorcycle under control and equipped with proper appliances when he approached the point of collision, under the circumstances indicated by the evidence, and not whether he had it under such control as that, without regard to latent defects in the mechanism of the machine, or in its device for slowing and coming to a stop, he could have stopped it within a reasonable distance, did not render the charge noxious, and so that it could not be explained by the court in the general or special charges.
The duty of a driver of a motor vehicle, discussed in White Swan Laundry Co. v. Wehrhan,
Charges which necessarily mislead a jury, rather than have a tendency to mislead, are held erroneous, and not to be cured by an explanatory charge. Kenan v. Holloway,
Charges 10 and 15, however, contain the expression, or expressions to like effect:
"If they [the jury] believe from the evidence that the plaintiff's negligence or failure to exercise reasonable care in the slightest degree contributed to his injuries, he cannot recover. * * *"
This is not the rule; his negligence or failure to exercise reasonable care must have contributed proximately to his injury. In giving these charges, reversible error was committed. Thompson v. Duncan,
Charge 18, given at defendant's request in writing, imposed upon the plaintiff the burden of proof or condition precedent to the right of recovery "to reasonably satisfy the jury" of his right of recovery under one or more of the counts "by a preponderance of the evidence"; and, failing to discharge the burden of proof so declared, the jury were instructed that the "verdict should be in favor of the defendant." The reasonable belief of the facts necessary to a recovery — to the reasonable satisfaction of the jury — was all that was required under the evidence and the law. Arndt v. City of Cullman,
"A mere preponderance of evidence upon the one side or the other does not necessarily afford a basis for a verdict. The fact that the jury have more belief' that one party has sustained his case or defense than they have belief as to the other party may not authorize a verdict. *215 The jury in civil cases must be reasonably satisfied that the facts essential to the cause of action have been established before they can justly render a verdict for the plaintiff, and there might well be a preponderance of evidence in favor of the plaintiff which would yet not be sufficient to reasonablysatisfy the jury of the truth of the facts involved in his claim, and they might well have 'more belief' of the truth of the evidence in support of plaintiff's case than of the truth of that adduced to the contrary, and still not attain that degree of satisfaction of its truth that would require a verdict for the plaintiff."
If, however, the charge was thought to be misleading, explanatory charges might have been requested (Callaway v. Gay, supra); and if the charge had a possible tendency to mislead, it was covered by the oral charge (Aquilino v. B. R. L. P. Co.,
Charges 7 and 9, given at defendant's request, assume as a fact that plaintiff violated the law in not giving a signal with his horn or whistle before approaching the intersection of the public highway and the Birmingham and Pratt City highway, and that such negligence rendered him liable as a matter of law. This fact was shown by his own testimony on the trial. There was, then, no conflict in the evidence as to the fact of the negligence in respect to giving signals that rendered it reversible error to give said charges, provided there was no evidence tending to show defendant's subsequent negligence.
As to this, an examination of the record discloses evidence tending to show that defendant saw plaintiff on the motorcycle approaching the intersection of the roads, at a high rate of speed, while defendant was a short distance away from the point of collision, and that after the collision defendant did stop his car within a short distance. This would not imply that he did not do his duty immediately on perceiving plaintiff's approach. There was no error in giving these charges. This tendency of evidence no doubt caused the trial court to submit to the jury the question of subsequent negligence on defendant's part, which was not required to be specially pleaded. As the case will have to be retried, we do not wish to embarrass the future inquiry of fact by further discussion of same.
It is unnecessary to indulge in a detailed discussion of other assignments of error, and for the foregoing reason the judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and McCLELLAN and SOMERVILLE, JJ., concur.