59 So. 775 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1912
1. A public highway is a road which every citizen has the right to use. “The fundamental idea of a highway is not only that it is public for free and unmolested passage thereon by all persons desiring to use it, but the use of a highway is not a privilege, but a right, limited by the rights of others, and to be exercised in a reasonable manner.”- — Radnor Tp. v. Bell, 27 Pa. Sup. Ct. 1, 5; The Law of Automobiles (2 Ed.) p. 88, § 3, note 15; Berry’s Automobile Law, § 114. The rights of footmen and drivers in the highway are equal, and both must exercise such care as circumstances may demand. — Elliott, Roads and Streets, § 834; The Law of Automobiles (2d Ed.) p. 96, § 9.
The rule requiring a person to stop, look, and listen before crossing a railroad track has no applicability to a person crossing a street or public highway. If a footman undertakes to cross a street at a point where it is frequently used by automobiles or other vehicles, he has a right, without looking and listening to presume that the drivers of automobiles and vehicles are obeying the' law of the road, and that they have so reduced or gauged their speed, and are so conducting themselves, as to meet the obligations which the circumstances demand of them at such place. Of course, if a person, in crossing a street or public highway, sees, in dangerous
The driving of an automobile on a public highway necessarily imposes upon the person in charge of its operation the duty of exercising reasonable care to avoid inflicting wrong and injury upon others, who' may lawfully be using" the same highway. — Overton v. Bush, 2 Ala. App. 623, 56 South. 852. The automobile is now the most dangerous vehicle in common use, and in operating it upon a public highway the operator must enlarge to a “commensurate extent the degree of vigilance and care necessary to avoid injuries which the use of his vehicle has made more imminent. — Berry on Automobile Law, § 119.
In the present case -the facts are that the appellee, while walking along the Old Shell road, near the city of Mobile, was run over or knocked down by appellant’s
There were three counts to the complaint. The first two counts charge that the injury was due to the simple negligence, and the third that it was due to the wantonness, of the appellant.
There were several pleas to the complaint. As the appellee was under no duty to “look and listen” before attempting to cross the highway, plea 2 was manifestly subject to the demurrer which was interposed to it.
Nlea 3 sets up that the appellee attempted to cross the road in front of “said approaching- automobile when, by crossing or attempting to cross said Old Shell road, she was liable to be stricken by said automobile.” This plea, -does not allege that appellee, when she attempted to cross the road, knew of the approach of the automo
Plea 2, as amended, sets up that the appellee attempted to cross Old Shell road in front of said approaching automobile, “when she knew that by so crossing or attempting to cross said Old Shell road in front of said approaching automobile she was liable to be stricken by said automobile.” This plea does not aver that the automobile was traveling at a high rate of speed, or that it was in close proximity to appellee when appellee attempted to cross the road.
The word “liable,” in the connection in which it is used in this plea, does not mean “probably.” As used in this plea, it can have no higher meaning than “possibly.” Webster says “liable” denotes something external which may befall us. “Subject” refers to evils which arise chiefly from internal necessity, and are likely to do so. Hence the former applies to what is accidental; the latter to things from which we often or inevitably suffer.
In the case of Beasley v. Linchan Transfer Co., 148 Mo. 413, 50 S. W. 87, the Supreme Court of Missouri said: “An event is ‘liable’ if its occurrence is within the range of possibility.” In the case of Williams v. Southern Railway Co., 119 N. C., 746, 26 S. E. 32, the trial court, in charging the jury in an action by a servant against a master for injuries received by the servant from the fall of a timber, said: “It was negligence to raise a log with a. rope, if the rope was so fastened that it was liable to slip off and injure the plaintiff, or any one else employed under Beister and working there that day.” Commenting upon that charge, the Supreme Court of North Carolina, in the opinion in the above case, said that the instruction was erroneous, as warranting the inference that, if the rope was so
A man is liable to be killed whenever he takes a trip upon a railroad, because of the known accidents to which railway travel is subject. A man is liable to be drowned Avhenever he takes a trip up a boat, because of the knoAvn dangers of the sea. A man cannot cross a traveled street in AAdiich he sees a vehicle or automobile near him without the knoAvledge that he is liable — not likely — to be hurt, if, perchance, the person in charge of the vehicle or automobile disregards his presence and negligently drives his vehicle or automobile over him.
It is evident that pleas 2 and 3, as amended, Avere also subject to the demurrers AAdiich Avere interposed to them.
After the court had sustained the demurrers to pleas 2 and 3, as amended, the appellant Avas again permitted to amend said pleas 2 and 3. It is manifest that plea 2, as thus again amended, was subject to the same grounds of demurrer, as it was before the last amendment.
Plea 3, as thus amended, Avhich fails to aver that appellee knew of the approach of the automobile, or that it Avas traveling at a high rate of speed, was also subject to demurrer, because the appellee owed the appellant no duty to look or listen before attempting to cross the road, or to use ordinary diligence, before attempting to cross the road, to ascertain Avhether appellant’s automobile was in dangerous proximity to her or not. The law gave to the appellee the right, without looking or listening or exercising other precaution, traveling along the Old Shell road, to presume, unless she kneAV to the contrary, that if an automobile was approaching when she undertook to cross the road its driver had it under control, and would not injure her. - It seems to us that
2. The excerpt from the argument of counsel for appellee to which exception was taken Avas a mere argument, and contained no statement of fact. We do not think the refusal of the court to exclude it from the jury constitutes reversible error. — Cross v. State, 68 Ala. 476; Lide v. State, 133 Ala. 62, 31 South. 953; Johnston Bros. Co. v. Bentley, 2 Ala. App. 281, 56 South. 742.
3. We are not of the opinion that this court should disturb the ruling of the trial court in overruling the appellant’s motion for a new trial. When the evidence is in conflict on the only point in issue, this court Avill not put the trial court in error for overruling the motion for a neAV trial, after verdict rendered, unless it plainly and palpably appears that the evidence fails to support the verdict. — Deming Co. v. Bryan, 2 Ala. App. 317, 56 South. 754; Montgomery-Moore Co. v. Leeth, 2 Ala. App. 324, 56 South. 770.
There is no error in this record, and the judgment of the court beloAV is affirmed.
Affirmed.
On Application for Rehearing.
The above opinion, at the time it Avas handed down, expressed the laAv of Alabama on the subject therein discussed, as Ave understood it under the then decisions
Since tlie rendition of tlie opinion in tlie above case of Barbour v. Shebor, the Supreme Court lias, however, rendered the opinion in the case of Adler v. Martin, 59 South. 597, present term. In the latter case the Supreme Court says that, while it cannot be affirmed, as matter of law, that a pedestrian’s failure before crossing a street, to first look up and down the street for approaching vehicles is or is not per se negligence on his part, nevertheless that his failure so to. do may, under certain circumstances, depending upon “the character of the street, the extent of its use by vehicles, the kind of vehicles that frequent it, and the locus of the attempted crossing,” etc., amount to negligence.
In the instant case, under the decision of the Supreme Court in Adler v. Martin, supra, plea 3, as last amended, which the Reporter will set out in his report of this case, was not subject to the plaintiff’s demurrer.
It is. not to be supposed, from anything that was said by the Supreme Court in the case of Adler v. Martin, supra, that, because it may be negligence in a person to cross a particular highway at a particular place at one time without looking for approaching vehicles, it is negligence for tlia.t person to cross that highway at another time without looking and listening for approaching vehicles. The Old Shell road may, at certain hours of the day, be so frequently used by automobiles and other vehicles as to render it an act of negligence on the part- of a foot passenger to attempt to cross it without looking and listening for approaching vehicles, when, at another hour of the day, its use for the above purposes- may be so slight or infrequent as to cast no duty upon a foot passenger to look and listen for the approach of vehicles. — Adler v. Martin, supra.
In the case of Barbour v. Shebor, supra, the Supreme Court applied to the drivers of automobiles the same rule which had been applied to the driver of a team of horses in Corona C. & I. Co. v. White, supra, and held that a plea, setting up as a defense that plaintiff “negligently attempted, to cross said street without looking-for said automobile, which was then and there approaching in rapid, motion on said street, and was struck by said automobile and injured, although he knew that automobiles were likely to pass on said street at any moment,” was insufficient, on demurrer, upon the ground stated in the opinion that the plaintiff was under no duty to look or listen before attempting to cross the street. The Supreme Court, in the case of Adler v. Martin, referring to the above plea in the case of Barbour v. Shebor, uses the following language: “It will suffice, for present purposes, to say that- a pedestrian’s failure to look for any particular automobile cannot be characterized as negligent, unless he knew it was approaching in such proximity as might render his inattention a menace to his safety. And so 'negligently attempting to cross the street’ without looking generally for a particular car is not the equivalent of a negligent failure to look up or down the street in the direction from which the car might be approaching.”
The rules, therefore, which had been laid down in Barbour v-. Shebor, supra, and in Corona C. & I. Co. v. White, supra, have been modified, or at least explained, by the decision in Adler v. Martin, supra. The opinion in that case was rendered by the Supreme Court pending this application for a rehearing, and, conforming our opinion to that of the last adjudication of the Supreme Court on the subject, we are of the opinion that the demurrer to pica 3, as last amended, should have been overruled.
The application- for a rehearing is therefore granted, the order of affirmative set aside, and for the error pointed ont the judgment of the court below is reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.