143 So. 460 | Ala. | 1932
Action on the case by appellee against appellant for negligently running an automobile upon or against plaintiff's cow. The case was submitted to the jury under the second count of the complaint, and it is urged that this count is indefinite in its averments as to the place of the injury. If it be conceded that the count is subject to this criticism, and that the demurrer thereto should have been sustained, yet it appears from the complaint itself, and the undisputed evidence, that the defendant was personally present at the time and place of the collision, and no injury resulted to him from this ruling. Bennett v. Bennett,
Defendant's plea 2 alleges that: "The plaintiff wasguilty of negligence that proximately contributed to the injury complained of in this, that plaintiff permitted said cow, alleged to have been injured together with a number of othercattle unattended by a keeper or other person, to be upon a public highway, in a stock law district, and that said alleged injuries were proximately caused by such negligence of the plaintiff in permitting said cow to be upon said highway where defendant was driving his automobile," etc. (Italics supplied.)
Plea 3 avers that the "injury was the result of an unavoidable accident on the part of this defendant and wascaused proximately by said cow having been hooked by anotherone of plaintiff's cows and being thereby pushed in front of and against defendant's moving automobile, and that defendantdid all in his power to avoid striking said cow but was unableto do so." (Italics supplied.)
Under the evidence the question as to whether or not defendant was guilty of negligence was for the jury.
Charge 5, refused to defendant, assumed that the facts hypothesized therein constituted contributory negligence and was invasive of the province of the jury. Garing v. Boynton et al. (Ala. Sup.)
There is no merit in appellant's contention of fatal variance between the averments and proof as to the time of the injury, and moreover the question was not raised on the trial as required by rule 34 of Circuit Court Practice (Code 1922, vol. 4, p. 906).
We have examined the several rulings on evidence and find nothing therein that requires treatment.
There is no reversible error on the record.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and THOMAS and KNIGHT, JJ., concur.