144 Ala. 351 | Ala. | 1905
The plaintiff, a minor, by next fried, J. B. Douglass, sues the Southern Bailway Company to recover damages for injuries received on account of negligence of defendant’s servants or agents in the operation of one of its trains. The complaint contained two counts, both of which were predicated on simple negligence.
A demurrer was interposed by the defendant to the second count as amended, which was overruled by the court. The action of the court in overruling the demurrer is assigned as error, but this assignment'is not insisted on in argument. Moreover, the count- demurred to stated a good cause of action. No error was committed in overruling the demurrer.
In both count® of the complaint the negligence of defendant’s servants in the operation of its train causing the injury, is averred in general terms. Under the state of the pleading, the plaintiff would not be confined in the introduction of his evidence to any one particular negligent act. The failure to ring the bell at the time of the accident was one of the issues involved.
On the conclusion of the evidence, and after the court had given several written charges at the instance of the plaintiff, the bill of exceptions recites as follows: “Thereupon the defendant requested the court to give the following written charges, numbered 2, 7, 9, 13, 15, 16, 17 and 18 in words and figures as follows,” setting out the charges, and at the conclusion states, “But the court refused to give each of said written charges, and and to the refusal of the court to give each of said written charges, the defendant then and there in open court duly, severally and separately excepted.” Under the authority of Verberg v. State, 137 Ala. 73, the defendant’s request of the court to give said written charges, “must •be construed as a request to give them in their entirety.” Yates v. State, at the present term. So construing the request, if any one of the charges was bad, there was. no error in refusing all of them. — Rarden v. Cunningham, 136 Ala. 263. Among these charges some were patently bad, but we need to call attention only to charge numbered 9. This charge was clearly an invasion of the province of the jury, as there was evidence which tended to show that the accident happened within the town of Riverside.
The only charge given at the request of the plaintiff, that is insisted on in argument by appellant’s counsel as being erroneous, is charge numbered 1. This charge
There is no pretense whatever of any intervening cause between the alleged negligence and the resulting injury, which in the remotest degree even contributed to the injury. In this respect the evidence was without dispute. It was open to the defendant to ask an explanatory charge, if the instruction given called for such.
The only other insistence in argument of error in the ■giving of this charge, is based on the idea that there was no evidence that the injury was inflicted within the town of Riverside. There was sufficient evidence to afford the inference that the accident occurred in the town, there is therefore, no merit in this contention.
We have carefully considered the evidence, and under the rule laid down in the leading case of Cobb v. Malone, 92 Ala. 630, and which has been followed in other cases, we cannot say that the trial court committed error in overruling the motion for a new trial. We fail to find any reversible error in the record, and the judgment must be affirmed.
Affirmed.