91 Ga. 808 | Ga. | 1893
It appears from the record that Eussell had been a locomotive engineer on a railroad in Alabama, and that on one occasion, while so employed, he left the depot in Birmingham with his train, without orders to do so and leaving the conductor of the train behind; that after running several miles he discovered that the conductor was missing, and thereupon started to back the train towards the depot, first sending Davis, a news agent who was on the train, to the rear, to act as watchman for him. While hacking the train he came into collision with another train, and Davis was killed. It seems that a suit was instituted against the railroad company, in the State of Missouri, for the homicide of Davis, and the plaintiff in that suit sued out a set of interrogatories for Eussell. Eussell had in the meantime removed from Alabama to this State. When the interrogatories were
It was claimed on the part of Russell that his answers would tend to criminate him under the following section of the criminal code of Alabama (Code of 1886, §4110): “If from the negligence, carelessness or want of proper sMll of any engineer or conductor having the control or management of any steam engine running on any railroad in this State, or any brakeman, the engine or cars are thrown off* the track, or any other accident occurs, and the life of any human being is thereby endangered,, such engineer, conductor or brakeman must, on conviction, be fined not less than five hundred nor more than two thousand dollars, and may also be imprisoned in thecouuty jail or sentenced to hard labor for the county for not more than twelve months.” The plaintiff* in error insists that under section 3711 of the same code, which declares that “ the prosecution of all misdemeanors before the circuit, city or county court, unless otherwise-provided, must be commenced within twelve months-next after commission of the offence,” any prosecution of Russell under section 4110, above quoted, is barred,, the offence punishable by that section being a misdemeanor and more than twelve months having elapsed since the homicide in question ; and therefore his answers could not tend to criminate him. We think it was not enough for the petitioner in the court below to show that the period of limitation prescribed by the.