58 Ala. 672 | Ala. | 1877
1. Tbe following facts are undisputed : Tbe defendant, corporation, was backing its train, pushing passenger and box freight-cars ahead of the engine, so that no person on tbe engine could see ahead of tbe train ; there was no brakeman or other person on tbe boxes, or stationed elsewhere, to keep a lookout ahead; this was within the limits of the city of Opelika; and the plaintiff’s intestate, walking-on the track, in the direction the train was moving, was overtaken by the train, run over, and killed. Under the principles declared in the case of Tanner v. Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, at this term, we hold this fixes the charge of negligence on the railroad company. — Balto. & O. R. R. Co. v. Daugherty, 36 Md. 366; Brown v. A. & St. Jo. R. R. Co. 50 Mo. 461, 467; C. B. & Q. R. R. Co. v. Triplett, 38 Ill. 483; Beisiegel v. N. Y. Cent. R. R. 34 N. Y. 622.
2. It is objected for appellant that the act “ To prevent homicides,” approved Feb. 5,1872, Pamph. Acts 83, relates only to homicides by natural persons, and does not authorize an action against a corporation. Sections 2297, • 2298, and 2300 of the Bevised Code, are reprints of sections 1938,1939 and 1941 of the Code of 1852. The act “To prevent homicides,” approved Feb. 21, 1860, Pamph. Acts 1859-60, page 42, had expressly repealed sections 1938-9 of the Code, and enacted in their stead the following : “ That in place of the sections of the Code hereby repealed, the following words be inserted, ‘ That, when the death of a person is unlawfully caused by another, the personal representative of the deceased may maintain an action against the latter at any time within two years thereafter, and may recover such sum as the jury deem just, and the amount so recovered, shall be distributed as personal property of an intestate is now distributed, and shall not be subject to the payment of the debts of the deceased. That the right of action hereby given shall survive against the personal representative of the person unlawfully causing the death as aforesaid.” This statute, it will be observed, while it repealed, in express terms, sections 1938-9 of the Code of 1852, left section 1941 unrepealed. It is thus shown that the act of 1860? copied above, was ex
3. What we have stated above, shows that the City Court, did not err in its rulings on the demurrers, or in the introduction of evidence. — See Govt. Street Railroad v. Hanlon, 53 Ala. 70. Neither did the court err in holding that want of care in plaintiff’s intestate, contributory to the injury con]-
4. The defendant asked several charges, which were refused. Charge three relates to positive and negative evidence. It was rightly refused, because it did not predicate that the witnesses should have equal means of knowledge, and be equally credible.- — Sharswood’s Starkie’s Ev. 867, in margin; Pool v. Devens, 80 Ala. 672.
5. Charge four fixes an erroneous measure of damages, and was rightly refused on that account, although in other respects it may have asserted correct legal principles. Lacerated feelings of surviving relations, and mere capacity of deceased to make money if permitted to live, do not constitute the measure of recovery under the act of Eeb. 5, 1872. Prevention of homicide is the purpose of the statute, and this it proposes to accomplish by such pecuniary mulct as the jury “ deem just.” The damages are punitive, and they are none the less so, in consequence of the direction the statute gives to the damages when recovered. They are assessed against the railroad “to prevent homicides.”
The other charges asked áre in conflict with our views above, and were rightly refused.
Judgment of the City Court affirmed,