117 So. 72 | Ala. | 1928
Defendant, Saunders System, let an automobile for hire to Bertie Green as "driver." The machine, while being operated by the driver, ran against plaintiff, Adams, causing injuries on account of which she brought this suit, alleging — in count D on which alone the case went to the jury — that defendant had negligently rented the car to the driver "with the brakes of said car in a defective and dangerous condition," as a proximate consequence whereof she suffered injuries described in the complaint. Numerous grounds of demurrer were assigned to this count, and some of them are repeated in the assignments of error and in appellant's brief. Those requiring notice are to the effect, briefly stated, that no privity of contract between plaintiff and defendant was shown; that there was no averment that defendant knew or could have known, the defective condition of the brakes; that an automobile is not an "immediately dangerous vehicle"; that there is no sufficient allegation of negligence; that proximate causal connection between the negligence alleged and plaintiff's injury is not shown.
The question involved relates to the alleged negligence of one who rented or let to hire an automobile, to the driver who was operating the machine at the time of plaintiff's injury. In Parker v. Wilson,
The duty of diligence arises, not entirely out of contract, but out of obligations imposed by law on every one in his dealings with his fellows. MacPherson v. Buick Motor Co.,
These considerations, in connection with our rule of pleading according to which only the most general allegations of negligence "little short indeed of mere conclusions," are required (Armstrong v. Montgomery Street Railway,
One other point, taken in appellant's brief, viz.: That the count in issue failed to allege that the defective and dangerous condition of the brakes proximately caused plaintiff's injuries, is answered by the plain language of the count, which alleges that plaintiff was injured as a proximate consequence of defendant's negligence.
The inquiry of fact whether the brakes of the car causing plaintiff's injuries were defective at and before the time of the accident, depended upon evidence in irreconcilable conflict and it is not possible for the court on the case shown in the bill of exceptions to say that there was any preponderance on the side of plaintiff. There was evidence tending to show that plaintiff's hurt was caused, not by reason of any defect in the brakes, but because the driver of the automobile, going at a high rate of speed across a crowded crossing, failed to make any use, or any attempted use, of the brakes with which the car was equipped. If the jury found in agreement with this tendency of defendant's evidence, then defendant was entitled to have the law as stated in the 7th and 9th charges refused to it. The evidence for defendant tended to sustain the hypotheses of these charges and they assert correct propositions of law. Nor was there anything like a clear statement of the proposition of either of these charges in the other instructions given by the court. In view of well-defined tendencies of the evidence, defendant was entitled to statements of this character, and we find no sufficient reason why they should not have been given.
It is said that charge 7 assumes that Bertie Green (the driver) was driving the car at a rapid rate of speed. Bertie's testimony in connection with the ordinance of the city of Birmingham — of which the court is by statute required to take cognizance — would warrant such an assumption, but on a fair interpretation the instruction is not guilty as alleged. Burgin v. Stewart,
The charge made the subject of the 30th assignment was refused without error. The charge limits the duty of inspection, or to be informed, to the agent or servant who rented the machine to the driver, whereas that duty rested upon the defendant corporation.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and BOULDIN, J., concur.
BROWN, J., concurs in the reversal on the 9th charge. *625