The plaintiff, appellee, was awarded judgment for damages on account of personal injuries inflicted by appellant's automobile while being operated by an agent or servant. The case was submitted to the jury on counts 1 and 3. The former declared upon simple negligence, the latter upon willful or wanton wrong, proximately causing plaintiff's injury. It is insisted that the court erred in overruling demurrer to these counts, the argument being that they were rendered defective by the omission to aver that the highway, on which the parties were averred to be when the injury occurred, was a public highway. The grounds of the demurrers to these counts, respectively, were general — did not specify, as the statute (Code, § 5340) requires, the particular, asserted defect to which the argument, only, refers. Aside from other reasons that might justify the counts (permissible general averments of negligence being employed to characterize the cause of the injury, Walker v. Ala., etc., Ry., 194 Ala. 360, 364, 70 So. 125), the court did not err in overruling the demurrers to these counts.
The plaintiff and another, riding a motorcycle, passed defendant's automobile on a public highway. Three men besides the defendant owner were in the car. One Hardy was driving the car, and defendant was occupying a back seat. There was evidence tending to show that Hardy was the agent or servant of defendant in operating the defendant's car. Over defendant's objections, the plaintiff was allowed to introduce testimony that one or two of the four men in the automobile "hollered" at plaintiff and his companion on plaintiff's motorcycle as they passed the automobile or just after they had passed the automobile and up to the time of the collision; the plaintiff, himself, testifying that one of them said: "* * * I will run over you." The chief objection was that the testimony did not designate either defendant or Hardy (the driver) as the person making this statement or others of somewhat similar character. The car and the motorcycle traveled only a short distance (about 30 yards at the outside) before the car struck the motorcycle. The evidence for defendant, given by him and the three men with him, denied that any such statements were made as the motorcycle passed or after it passed the automobile and before the impact. The defendant's theory of nonliability *Page 497 was supported by testimony designed to show that the injury to plaintiff was due to unavoidable accident, so far as defendant or Hardy (the driver) were concerned; that plaintiff's motorcycle "wobbled" in front of the automobile in such proximity that all diligence could not have prevented the collision. On the other hand, the plaintiff's evidence tended to show a careless, if not entirely reckless, running down of the motorcycle by the automobile. Testimony of the character under consideration was admissible in the state of the evidence before the court at the time it was presented. It was of the res gestæ of the event. According to the evidence for the plaintiff, the "hollering" described in the testimony came from the unidentified one or two of the four men in the automobile, as and after the motorcycle passed the car, the "hollering" continuing up to the collision. At the rate of speed the car was shown to be running, a very short period elapsed between the moment the motorcycle passed until the impact occurred. During this period the car was in motion toward the place of collision and the motorcycle was ahead but a short distance. If, as is in effect argued for appellant, the "hollering" — other than the statement quoted, "I will run over you" — came from the defendant's two guests in the car, and not from the defendant and Hardy (the driver), that fact would not conclude to a denial of the admissibility of this testimony. It has been held here that declarations falling within the res gestæ of the event under inquiry are not rendered inadmissible because they emanated from disinterested third persons or bystanders, so to speak. Travelers' Ins. Co. v. Whitman, 202 Ala. 388, 391, 80 So. 470. Whether the language attributed by plaintiff's evidence to undesignated one or two of the four men in the automobile was inspired by a purpose to conserve the safety of plaintiff and his companion on the motorcycle, or, on the other hand, was the result of less worthy motives, were inquiries for the jury to solve in the light of the attending circumstances. Assuming the acceptance of the plaintiff's version, it cannot be affirmed that the remarks coming from the car were without effect to explain the collision. Undoubtedly, it was for the jury to determine whether these exclamations or declarations, if made by another than Hardy, would not or did not serve to call the driver's particular attention to the plaintiff's presence and movement and suggest that degree of care the circumstances required. The expression, "I will run over you," is in a different category. If the jury credited plaintiff's version of this phase of the occurrence, it was open to inference that Hardy, who was at the wheel and in control of the car's movement, may have used the quoted expression; and, if so, its interpretation, whether a threat or a well-intentioned warning, was a matter for the jury to decide.
The plaintiff was permitted, over defendant's objections, to elicit from the witness Godfrey, a recital of statements attributed to the defendant, himself, before plaintiff and his motorcycle had been taken from under the automobile. The effect of these statements was that defendant ordered others not to extricate the plaintiff until plaintiff had admitted his "fault" in causing the collision. The impact had occurred only a few minutes before. The plaintiff was still beneath the car. Whether the statements thus and then attributed to defendant, himself, were of the res gestæ may, perhaps, be a debatable question. Nevertheless, this testimony was admissible as a circumstance susceptible of an interpretation reflecting upon the asserted freedom of fault of both defendant and Hardy in respect of the collision. If credited by the jury, the defendant sought through a character of duress to extract from the pinioned and suffering man beneath the car an admission designed to exonerate defendant and the driver from culpability in the premises. From such conduct on the part of the defendant, himself, under such circumstances, the jury might have inferred him to be inspired by a then consciousness unfavorable to innocence of wrong or blame and to have constituted, in a sense, an inculpatory declaration by the owner of the car causing the injury. Like considerations justify the court's action in admitting testimony of the statement, attributed to defendant, himself — while plaintiff was being carried home in defendant's automobile after the injury — wherein defendant was said to have told plaintiff not to go to court; that he had a case or more against plaintiff. Of a similar nature were other statements attributed to defendant wherein he was said to have charged plaintiff with the blame for the collision, declaring in profane terms plaintiff's drunkenness was the cause of plaintiff's action on this occasion. Of course, these statements — if the jury found they were in fact made notwithstanding denial by defendant's evidence — were inconclusive; their credibility, effect and weight being for the jury's appraisal.
For plaintiff testimony was presented designed to show that the defendant was drunk or drinking on this occasion. The witnesses testified to the impression, in that respect, the appearances made upon them. Under the doctrine of South. N. A. R. Co. v. McLendon, 63 Ala. 266, 276, and later decisions in its line, no error affected the action of the court in overruling objection to such testimony. 7 Encyc. of Ev. pp. 777, 778.
The only grounds of objection to the question to plaintiff inquiring what work plaintiff had done since the injury were that the matter called for was immaterial and incompetent. *Page 498 Under the averments of the complaint, setting forth the elements of damage claimed, it is manifest that neither of these grounds was tenable. The purpose of the examiner, evidenced by the question, was related to the effect of the injury upon his capacity to work. Mobile Light R. Co. v. Walsh, 146 Ala. 295, 304, 305, 40 So. 560.
The complaint contained no claim for damages to the motorcycle, and no evidential data was given wherefrom such damage to that machine was ascertainable or measurable. It cannot be affirmed that any sum for damage to the motorcycle entered into the amount of the verdict. The evidence descriptive of the destructive effect of the collision upon the motorcycle was properly admitted for its service to show the circumstances, material to the controverted issues, surrounding the collision. If the defendant had apprehended the inclusion of such damages in a recovery by plaintiff, a special instruction, excluding that element, should have been requested.
Whether the plaintiff was in the habit of recklessly running in front of people was immaterial to any issue in the case.
The only efficient exception taken to any part of the oral charge of the court related to plaintiff's right to recover the amount of medical expense resulting from his injury. The references otherwise in the bill of exceptions to parts of the oral charge relate to topics therein, not, as is required, to definite language employed. There was at least an implied obligation upon the part of plaintiff, then an adult, to pay the doctor's bill, shown to be reasonable for the service rendered plaintiff, and hence such liability therefor by the plaintiff as to justify the recovery of that amount if, of course, the plaintiff was otherwise found entitled to judgment for the injury suffered. The fact that his father sent for the doctor did not conclude against plaintiff's implied liability to pay for these professional services to him.
Charge 7, refused to defendant, would have excluded the right of plaintiff to recover under count 1 of the complaint. It was refused without error.
In response to other assignments argued in brief, it will suffice to say that under the evidence the material issues tendered by counts 1 and 2 were for the jury's consideration. There was evidence tending to support the averment of aggravated wrong in count 2, and hence forbade instruction against a recovery of exemplary damages.
No error appearing, the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SOMERVILLE and THOMAS, JJ., concur.