103 Ala. 142 | Ala. | 1893
He brought suit, first, against the Georgia Pacific Company ; and, on substantially the same essential facts as are presented in this record, the court below gave the general charge in favor of the defendant, and the judgment in its favor, on appeal to this court, was affirmed. From the report of the case, it does not appear that the fact of the transfer of the • railroad and its appliances from the Georgia Pacific to the defendant company, was shown. — Bivins v. Ga. Pac. Railway Co., 96 Ala. 325.
In that case we said, there was no proof that the machinery as constructed was dangerous. That was left to inference; and, it was not explained nor attempted to be, how the brakeman’s apparel became entangled with the handle of the switch, or that there was any thing in the nature of the structure of the switch calculated to produce such results; tha-t the natural inference from the testimony was, that it was the result of a misstep, was accidental, and would not be likely to occur again ; and there was no testimony from which the jury could infer negligenee on the part of the railroad company. The plaintiff in bringing suit against this company, has sought to supply the deficiency of proof which disentitled him to a recovery against the other company, in that suit. He attempted to prove in this case, by his own testimony and that of an expert witness, that the switch, as constructed, was dangerous or unsafe for use by switchmen in boarding passing trains.
A switch is a mechanical device by which engine and cars maybe run from one track to another. It is not, in its design, intended or built for the purpose of a step or platform, for one to mount from the ground, or from the cross-ties on which the switch is constructed, on to a moving train. Its highest design is reached; whencon
Reversed and remanded.