This is an action by an employee against his employer to recover damages for personal injury. The complaint contained five counts, to all of which demurrers were interposed, which were overruled. Three of the counts — the third, fourth, and fifth— were eliminated by written charges given at the instance of the defendant. The defendant pleaded the general issue, and also three special pleas, all of which were demurred to. The demurrers to two of the special pleas were sustained, and the demurrer to the remaining special plea wag overruled.
There was no error in overruling the demurrers to the first and second counts of the complaint.—Alabama Great Southern Ry. v. Brock, 161 Ala. 351, 49 South. 453.
Nor was there error in the action of the court in sustaining the demurrers to defendant’s second and third pleas. Neither of those pleas averred facts warranting the conclusion that the plaintiff assumed the risks to which he was exposed in consequence of the negligence alleged in the complaint.
There was evidence tending to show that the plaintiff, who was a brakeman and flagman, and at the time was *285in tlie caboose in the discharge of his duty, was injured as the result of his being thrown against the front door of the caboose by the sudden stopping of the train, then on a switch track, called the “scale track,” in the yards of the defendant in Montgomery. In the first count of the complaint the injury was attributed to the negligence of one S. S. Arn, the engineer in charge of the train. In the second count the injury was attributed to the negligence of one R. L. Bartlett, the front brakeman, who acted as a switchman in letting the train into the switch track. There was proof going to show that the switch track upon Avhich the injury occurred Avould hold about 42 or 43 cars; that the train upon AAdiich plaintiff was injured contained 38 or 39 cars; that the train entered this switch track at its southern end a.t about 3 o’clock in the morning, the train being-headed north; that at the time of the injury the entire train had got on this SAvitch track, and Avas then running at the rate of 15 miles an hour, Avhen it was suddenly stopped by the engineer by the emergency application of the brakes; that the usual rate of speed Avhen going into a switch track to leave a train was about 4 miles an hour; that no signal or alarm was given that the brakes were to be applied; that the usual Avay of stopping the train was by a gradual reduction of the air on the brakes, AAdiich brings the train to an easy stop; and that on that occasion the train did not stop in the usual and ordinary way of bringing cars to a stop in the yard, and that there was a train rule against applying the brakes suddenly, unless there was danger of injury to a person or property. The track upon which the alleged injury occurred was straight, and was one of four switch tracks branching- out from the main line, and running parallel with it. There Avas also evidence tending to show that it Avas the duty of R. L. Bartlett, the *286front brakeman, to let' the train into one of the switch tracks which was clear, so that, after the cars were stored on that track, the engine could go out at the other end of it on a track called the “lead track,” which ran to the shops; that, when he turned the switch and let the train into the scale track, there was a car standing on that track at its northern end, obstructing the track, so that the engine could not get out that way; that there was nothing to obstruct his view” and that he threw the switch so as to let the train into the scale track, when he should have let it into the next switch track, called “track 1.”
It is insisted by counsel for appellant that it urns error to refuse the general affirmative charge requested as to the first count of the complaint; and the line of reasoning adopted in support of this position is, in brief, this: “Plaintiff’s falling against the door of the car was due to the sudden stopping of the train by the emergency application of the brakes. Under the evidence, the only negligence with which the engineer could be charged was in running the train, in going into the swdtch, at an unusual and unnecessary rate of speed. But the plaintiff can derive no' benefit from the engineer’s breach of duty in this regard, because the rate of speed was not the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injury. The engineer, on discovering an obstruction on the switch track, was warranted in making the emergency application of the brakes, in order to prevent a collision and a consequent Injury to persons or property. That act did not constitute negligence on his part, as lie was justified in assuming, until informed or notified that such was not the case, that there had been a due performance- of the dutjr imposed upon another em-plo'yee of letting the-train-into the switch1 track which whs clear óf any' obstruction.' This'- line of 'argument *287leaves out of view some facts in evidence which had a hearing upon the question whether the engineer was negligent in getting his train to the place at which it became necessary to make a sudden stop to avoid a collision. The switch track the train went into was straight. There were lights in the yard. There was evidence tending to show that there was nothing to obstruct the engineer’s view; that the switch track would hold about 42 or 43 cars, while the train upon which plaintiff was injured contained 38 or 39 cars, and the whole of it was already on the switch track when the sudden stop was made, so that the train could not then have been far from the place where it must be stopped for it to be left on that track; that defendant’s yard at Montgomery was a busy place, at which a large amount of traffic was handled; that there was a rule to approach the yards with the train under control; and that it was very usual for brakes to be applied when heading in and out of the yards on account of the traffic. If it' was necessary, in order to warrant a finding in favor of the plaintiff under the first count of the complaint, to have evidence that the negligence of the engineer alone caused the injury, it seems that it hardly would be permissible, in vieAV of the tendencies of the evidence above stated to concludé that there was not evidence to support a finding by the jury that but for the negligence of the engineer there would have been no occasion for his sudden stopping of the train, and that in the circumstances his act in suddenly stopping the train Avas negligent.
Counsel for appellant insist that it Avas error to refuse the general affirmative charge'requested bjr the defendant as to the second count of the complaint','because the'only" respect in Avhioli "the evidence tended to shoAv that Bartlett, the SAvifchman, was negligent was-in his *288letting the train into a switch track which was not clear of obstructions; and it is urged that the injury cannot be imputed to this act as its proximate cause, as it was directly attributable to the act of the engineer in suddenly stopping the train, and that this act of the enginerr was an intervening efficient cause, subsequent to and independent of the act of the switchman, and that, therefore, the latter could not amount to more than a remote cause of the injury. There is a well-considered ruling in a case presenting a state of facts somewhat similar to that in the case at bar which would lend support to the conclusion that the act of Bartlett, charged as he was with the duty of letting the train into a switch track which was free of obstructions, in letting the train into an obstructed track, could be regarded as an efficient proximate cause either of a- collision, or of a sudden stopping of the train, occasioned by such obstruction, and that the negligence of the engineer was not an independent intervening cause that interrupted or turned aside the natural sequence of events following the act of the switchman, or prevented the natural and probable effect of his negligence; in other words that, while an exercise of due care by the engineer would have averted the probable result of the switch-man’s negligence, yet, in its relation to the switchman’s fault, the breach of duty on the part of the engineer could be regarded as merely a failure to interpose his care to avoid an injury which reasonably might be anticipated from a cause already set in motion, and not as an independent intervening cause producing a different result from that which could reasonably have been anticipated as a probable consequence of the original act or omission of the switchman.—Union Pacific Ry. Co. v. Callaghan, 56 Fed. 988, 6 C. C. A. 205. See, also, Bul v. Mobile & Montgomery R. Co., 67 Ala. 206.
*289But it was not necessary, under either of the two counts of the complaint, that the evidence in support of it should show that the negligence alleged was the sole cause of the injury. If the damage resulted from the concurrent, wrongful acts of two persons, each of them may be counted on as the proximate cause.— Oooley on Torts, pp. 68, 78. “If the defendant’s wrongful act is one of two or more concurrent efficient causes, other than plaintiff’s fault, which co-operate directly to produce the result, this, under the authorities, is all that is requisite for fastening liability on him.—Western Ry. of Ala. v. Bistnmk, 85 Ala. 357, 5 South. 79; Home Telephone Company v. Fields, 150 Ala. 306, 43 South. 711. The employer’s liability statute (Code 1907, § 3910, subd. 5) rendering the defendant liable to the plaintiff for an injury resulting from the negligence of either the engineer or the switchman while in the performance of the duty imposed on the occasion in question, it would be liable for an injury proximately resulting from the negligence of the switchman in letting the train into the wrong track, if the injury would not have resulted but for that negligence, even though the negligence of the engineer contributed to produce the result. And it would be liable, under the other count, for the negligence of the engineer, though the injury could not have happened but for the negligence of the switchman in letting in the train into the wrong switch track.—Terre Hante & I. R. Co. v. Mansherger, 65 Fed. 196, 12 C. C. A. 754; 1 White on Personal Injuries on Railroads, §§ 27, 28; 2 Labatt on Master and Servant, § 813. “The independent intervening cause that will prevent a recovery on account of the act or omission of a wrongdoer must be a cause which interrupts the natural sequence of events, turns aside their course, prevents the natural and'probable result of the *290original act or omission, and produces a different result, that could not have been reasonably anticipated. The concurrent or succeeding negligence of a fellow servant or a third person which does not break the sequence of events is not such a cause, and constitutes no defense for the original wrongdoer, although, in the absence of the concurrent or succeeding negligence, the accident could not have happened.”—Union Pacific Ry. Co. v. Callaghwi, supra. There is an additional support for this conclusion, when, as in this case, both wrongdoers are fellow servants of the plaintiff, for whose negligence on the occasion in question the statute renders the defendant liable to the plaintiff. On the evidence in this case the jury was warranted in finding that the injury to the plaintiff was the result of the concurrent negligence of the switchman and of the engineer, and there was no error in the refusal to give the affirmative charge requested by the defendant. •
To the claim that the general affirmative charge requested by the defendant should have been given because the allegations of defendant’s plea numbered 4 were sustained by the uncontradicted evidence, it is a sufficient answer to say that, as to the issue raised by that plea., the evidence was in conflict.
Charges E and F, requested by the defendant, were plainly faulty, in view of the evidence tending to show that whatever necessity there may have been of bringing the train to a sudden stop was itself attributable to negligence alleged in the complaint.
The defendant, by its failure to interpose an objection, having speculated on what the answer might be to the question, “Was that the usual and ordinary way of bringing these cars to a stop over there in these yards?” cannot get any benefit here from the refusal of the court to sustain its motion to exclude the answer *291to that question.—Dowling v. State, 151 Ala. 131, 44 South. 403.
The mere fact that plaintiff at some time in the past may have been discharged from his employment could shed no light on the issues in the case, and there was no error in sustaining the objection to the question on that subject.
In view of the evidence tending to show that any necessity of suddenly stopping the train on the occasion in question was brought about by the negligence of the switchman or of the engineer, the claim cannot be sustained that the motion for a new trial should have been granted on the ground that the danger to which the plaintiff was so exposed was one necessarily incident to the employment in which he was engaged.
Affirmed.