114 Ala. 183 | Ala. | 1896
After the evidence was all in, the the court at the written request of the defendant, instructed the jury that they could not find a verdict for the plaintiff under any of the counts of the complaint except the 6th and 7th, and the case was submitted to them on the evidence under these two counts, and the pleas thereto. We may, therefore, properly pretermit all inquiry into the rulings of the court, on any of the counts except the two last named; for, if there was any error in those other rulings, it was cured by the last ruling in favor of defendant, eliminating all consideration of the other counts from the jury. The case was tried on pleas of the general issue to these two counts, and on a plea of contributory negligence by the plaintiff.
There were two cars that had been cut off and placed on a switch track called No. 3. The plaintiff was-attempting, when injured, to couple two other cars which had become detached from the engine, and run or “kicked” down to this switch track, No.- 3, to be coupled to the two already standing still thereon. The switching was done in the-yard of defendant at Avondale, about three o’clock in the morning, under one Brown, the foreman of the crew. Plaintiff worked in the “field,” as it was called, and the other brakeman followed the engine. The plaintiff, in giving an account of the injury, testified that he had been engaged in coupling cars in that particular yard about fifteen days, at the time of the accident, bút had been railroading five or six years; had been working for that time on the L. & N. and the Chattanooga roads; that he had coupled the E. T., V. & G-. cars, on which dead-blocks were used — the kind of cars to be coupled on this occasion, as the proof tended without conflict to show; that he had coupled almost all kinds of cars ; that those with double dead-blocks or buffers are dangerous to couple, if one does not use great caution, and even then, they will sometimes catch him, and that it is safer for the party doing the coupling, for the cars to come back easy, and with the double buffers, it is more dangerous to couple when the cars are coming back hard. He also testified, that Brown, the foreman, said to him when he pulled out from the other track, No. 1 or 2, that he was going to throw some cars on this track, No. 3, and when he made the remark, he pulled the train off of track No. 1 or 2, where it then was, the engine being ahead of the cars, and ran back or kicked these cars on to track No. 3, to the two standing cars; that the distance, from the standing cars to the switch,
The evidence further tended to show, that there was no emergency for making the coupling, and that the cars to be coupled were to remain afterwards on the side track. Plaintiff also stated, that he saw that the stationary car had dead-blocks on it, but he could not see the one that was moving until it got right close to him, and that there was no lantern or other evidence, of any one being on the approaching car.
The plaintiff, as he himself shows, was experienced in coupling-cars, and was familiar with the use of couplers such as were of the pattern used on the cars he attempted to couple. They were, as he says, of a dangerous kind to couple, without the exercise of great care ; and that they were dangerous, the injury plaintiff received fully established. Their danger was known to him, and the peril was obvious. This called for the exercise of a higher than ordinary degree of care by him, in his attempt to couple them. — L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Boland, 96
There was no emergency or rule of the company, calling on him to incur risk in effecting the coupling, which was not consistent with his safety. The cars, when coupled, were to be left on the track. It was a matter of no serious consequence for them not to have been coupled. The night was dark; the plaintiff had reason to believe that the cars would be run in from the engine on the switch by a kicking switch, and not by pushing them ; he failed to discover on the approaching car any light or other evidence that they were under the control of any one on them; he stood with his back to the cars approaching him, placed his right arm on the stationary car with his lamp on it as a careless man or one indifferent to danger might do, adjusted the pin on the stationary car, and attempted with a short stick, to lift the link of the other one as it approached, and in doing so incautiously placed his hand between the dead-woods. Pie took no note of the speed of the approaching cars, and was attempting in the dark, to make the coupling of cars provided, as stated, with double dead-woods, when a kicking switch, as he had every reason to believe, had been made, and which in fact had been make. He knew, that in making such a kick of cars, for the purposes of coupling, it was impossible for the engineer to accurately adjust the rate of speed of the approaching cars, kicked, as he says, from a distance of from ten to fifteen car lengths, so that they would barely reach the cars at which he was standing. The risk he assumed was voluntary, self-imposed, very great and unnecessary. — R. & D. R. R. Co. v. Free, 97 Ala. 234; R. & D. R. R. Co. v. Bivins, 103 Ala. 148; George v. Mobile & O. R. R. Co., 109 Ala. 245; Warden v. Railroad Co., 94 Ala. 277, 279.
We are forced to the conclusion that the plaintiff, under the facts before us, was guilty not only of a want of ordinary care to prevent the injury inflicted on him, but he was guilty of very great negligence, which contributed proximately to the injury he received.
The general charge as requested by defendant should have been given. This relieves us from considering other errors assigned.
Reversed and remanded.