135 Ala. 533 | Ala. | 1902
This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries received hv the plaintiff, appellant here, from being run against and struck by defendant’s locomotive. The complaint contained three counts, the first charging wanton or willful injury, and the second and third alleging simple negligence. In the second count the place of the accident is alleged to have been “at or near Gate City,” and while plaintiff was crossing defendant's track, without averring that Gate City was a city, town or village. In the third count, the place of the accident is alleged to have been in a “certain village, town, or city, known as Gate City;” and in this count it
On the trial the only evidence adduced was that of the plaintiff and his witnesses, the defendant offering none. Tin1 evidence without conflict shows that the plaintiff walked on the track of the defendant at a private footpath in the outskirts of Gate City, a town or village of about twelve or fifteen hundred population, and before he got out of the way of an approaching passenger train was struck by the head-block of the locomotive and injured. That the path led across defendant’s track to the Reed house on the south side, where plaintiff lodged. That besides this house, there were two other houses on that side, about seventy-five or a hundred yards apart. There is neither averment nor proof as to the extent of the use of the path, or to numbers or frequency of persons crossing; nor any averment or proof as to knowledge on the. part of defendant’s engineer or other person in control of, and operating the locomotive, of the use of the foot way or path. That the train which struck the plaintiff was running at the rate of forty-five or fifty miles an hour. A here, is no pretense that the act of running against and injuring the plaintiff was willful; on the contrary the plaintiff’s undisputed evidence showed that the engineer was at the time looking back in an op
The next consideration is whether the general, charge should have been given on the second and third counts' which counted on simple negligence, and on the issue of contributory negligence, raised by the plea to those counts. The determination of this question is not wholly free from difficulty. We have, held the rule to be that “the affirmative charge should never be given when there is any material conflict in the evidence, or when there is evidence which authorizes a reasonable inference of facts unfavorable to a right of recovery by the party asking the. charge.”—White, McLane & Morris v. Farris, 124 Ala. 470. There was evidence tending to show that the train was being run within the limits of a city, town,
Our conclusion is that the trial court committed no error in the giving of the affirmative charge requested in writing by the defendant.
There being no error shown in the record, the judgment of the circuit court will be affirmed.