71 So. 701 | Ala. | 1916
This is an action under the homicide statute, to recover damages of the defendant for the wrongful death of appellee’s intestate. . The intestate was killed by one of the appellant’s freight trains in the town of Scottsboro, Ala. The train which killed him was backing on a side track, for the purpose of leaving a tank of oil which was consigned to that station. Intestate was the agent of the oil company, the consignee of the tank of oil being delivered by the railroad, and was on the track for the purpose of designating the point on the side track at which the tank should be left, so that the oil could be stored in the tanks of the consignee. It was a disputed question, made so by both the pleading and proof, whether he was thus on the side track with the knowledge, consent, or request of the railroad company. This fact, of course, is an element to be considered in determining the duty which the defendant owed the intestate, and whether the handling and movement of the train on the occasion in question was negligent or wanton. It was also made a disputed question by the pleading and the proof whether the side track of the railroad at the place of the injury was so used by the public, by such numbers and with such frequency, as to impose on the defendant the duty of keeping a lookout for trespassers on the track at the point of the collision with intestate.
Other charges were properly refused to the defendant, because they were calculated to mislead the jury as to whether or not contributory negligence would be availing as a defense.
The propositions of law announced above in this opinion have been so frequently reaffirmed that it is both useless and a waste of time and space to cite the decisions.
The predicate laid 'for this evidence was as follows: “The plaintiff’s attorney then asked the witness (engineer) this question :. ‘After that man was run down and after you got on your engine a few minutes afterwards, didn’t you say to some brakeman on your train, and in the hearing of Ñute Bell, make the remark that “Damn him! he' ought to have been killed; he ought not to have been on the track?” ’ Defendant’s counsel objected to the question for the reason that no sufficient predicate had been laid; that it called for immaterial testimony, and was an attempt to prove the remark of the engineer and not a part of the res gestse. The court overruled the objection, and the de
“The objection to the testimony of the witness Allison should have been sustained. This witness was permitted to testify to the jury that, ‘a few minutes after the plaintiff had been hurt, the conductor asked the engineer why he did not respond to the bell call; and the engineer answered that he did respond to all the bell calls he heard.’ To the admission of this evidence the defendant duly excepted. The rule is well established that it is not within the scope of an agent’s authority to bind his principal by admissions having reference to bygone transactions. The only ground upon which the admissibility of an agent’s declarations can be justified is that they must have been made while in the discharge of his duties as agent, and be so closely connected with the main transaction in issue as to constitute a part of the res geste.—Mobile & Mont. R. R. Co. v. Ashcraft, 48 Ala. 15; Tanner’s Ex’r v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 60 Ala. 621; Robinson v. Fitchburg & W. R. R. Co., 7 Gray (Mass.) 92; Baldwin v. Ashby, 54 Ala. 82; 1 Brick. Dig. p. 63, §§ 160-162. * * * In Luby
Declaration of a fireman to the engineer, immediately after running the engine over a mule, “You knocked one off on this side,” is not admissible against their principal, unless it was a part of the res gestae.—Railroad Co. v. Sistrunk, 85 Ala. 353, 5 South. 79.
Agents or officers of companies cannot bind such companies by admissions or declarations as to past transaction.—Railroad Co. v. Davis, 91 Ala. 621, 8 South. 349; Railroad Co. v. Cogsbill, 85 Ala. 456, 5 South. 188; Railroad Co. v. Carl, 91 Ala. 272, 9 South. 334; Danner v. Stonewall Co., 77 Ala. 184.
Declarations of a depot agent that plaintiff’s goods were burned up in the car are not admissible against the agent’s principal, when sued for the goods.—Railroad Co. v. Carl, supra.
For the error indicated, the judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.