Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Christian Moerlein Brewing Co.

SIMPSON, J.

This was an action by the appellee against the appellant for damages for the death of two horses and three mules, the property of the plaintiff, which, it is claimed, were killed by reason of the negligence of defendant’s agents in managing its locomotive. The only assignments of error insisted on by appellant relate to the action of the court in giving certain charges at the request of the plaintiff.

1. Section 3440 of the Code of 1886 requires the engineer, or other person having control of a locomotive, to blow the whistle qr ring the bell, at short intervals, while passing through a villiage, town or city, and also, on perceiving obstructions, to use all means, etc. Section 3443 makes the company responsible for damages “resulting from a failure to comply with the requirements of the three preceding sections, or any negligence on the part of such company or its agents; and when any person or stock is killed or injured, or other property destroyed or damaged, by the locomotive or cars of any railroad at any one of the places specified in the three preceding sections, the burden *of proof, in any suit brought therefor, is on the railroad company to show a compliance with the requirements of such sections, and that there was no negligence on the part of the company or its agents.”—Mobile & B. Ry. v. Holborn, 84 Ala. 133, 138, 4 South. 146; A. G. S. R. R. v. Boyd, 124 Ala. 525, 528, 27 South. 408. It is manifest, then, that the burden is upon the plaintiff, first, to show that the stock was killed or injured by the locomotive or cars at one of the places named, and, when that is done, *396the burden is on the defendant to negative the negligence.

According to the bill of exceptions, “the plaintiff offered evidence tending to show that it owned two horses and three mules”; that said animals came out in front of the engine, and were struck by it, two of the mules being knocked into the creek and injured, “and the other three killed upon the bridge”; and the injured animals were killed by the president of the Humane Society. The accident occurred about 12 o’clock at night, and “plaintiff’s only eyewitness to the actual collision with the stock testified that he was standing about 300 yards away,” and it is not stated what he testified to. The defendant’s engineer testified that he was keeping a constant lookout ahead, and when his engine got within 42 to 50 feet of One Mile Bridge he saw three head of stock about 30 feet in front of him, two.upon the track and two feeding along the edge; that the engine struck one horse and ran over one mule, and stopped about the middle of tlm bridge; that one horse fell through the bridge; and that he saw a mule in the water, but had not seen it until his engine stopped. Under this evidence it was a question for the jury to decide whether or not the stock belonged to the plaintiff, and whether the horse which fell through the bridge and the mule, which was seen in the water were injured by the locomotive, and, if injured, to what extent. Hence the court erred in assuming that this had been proved, and giving charge 1 at the request of the plaintiff.—McDougal's Adm’r v. Rutherford, 30 Ala. 253, 260; McKenzie v. Br. Bak., 28 Ala 606, 611, 65 Am. Dec. 369; Brooks v. Hildreth & Moseley, 22 Ala 470, 473.

This is an answer, also, to the contention of the appellee that, because the defendant failed to comply with the requirements of the statute in regard to obstructions on the track, therefore the plaintiff was entitled to the general charge, and all errors were without injury. Another objection to the general charge is that the evidence is entirely inconclusive as to the injury to the two animals which fell into the creek.

*3972. While charge 2 may have been confusing, or misleading, yet it could have been corrected by an explanatory charge, and the court cannot be placed in error for giving it.

3. This court has said that: “A failure to comply with the requirements of that statute is not, in every case, an actionable wrong. The penalty for such failure is a liability ‘for all damages done to persons, or to stock.or other property, resulting from’ such failure. It is only when the injury results from the failure to comply with the statute that the action for damages can be maintained. The principle only extends to such injuries as are caused by the nonobservance of such rules.”—Hilliker-Krebs B. & M. Co. v. Birmingham Ry. & Elec. Co., 100 Ala. 424, 425, 426, 14 South. 200. Hence charge 4 was defective, in Instructing the jury that, if the statute was not complied with, the plaintiff was entitled to a verdict, without hypothesizing any causal connection between the failure,, or the negligence and the injury; also in requiring a preponderance of the evidence. While it is true, as stated in other cases, that when the injury, the ownership, and the value of the animal have been shoAvn, a prima facie case is made out against the railroad company (L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Cochran, 105 Ala. 354, 16 South. 797; So. Ry. v. Reeves, 129 Ala. 457, 29 South. 594), yet, even though the railroad company might fail to prove compliance with the statute, it could rebut that prima facie presumption by showing that, as a matter of fact, there Avas no causal connection betAveen the failure and the injury.

4. The objection raised by the appellant to charge 5, given at the request of the plaintiff, is that, in order to predicate negligence on the violation of a city ordinance in regard to speed, it is necessary to set up the ordinance in the pleading. It is true that this court remarked. in the Prather Case, that “good pleading requires the pleader to set out so much of an ordinance as is relied upon to support the cause of action” (So. Ry. Co. v. Prather, 119 Ala. 588, 595, 24 South. 836, 841, 72 Am. St. Rep. 949); but that Avas a case based *398upon the violation of the city ordinance, and. the. second count averred the existence of an ordinance prohibiting a railroad from obstructing a street. Said count was demurred to, and the court did not find it necessary to pass distinctly on the demurrer, but made the above remark, and stated that the count should be amended. So. also, in the case of Case v. Mayor of Mobile, 30 Ala. 538, was a prosecution for a violation of a city ordinance.

In the case now under consideration the action was for negligence, and the question is simply whether evidence of the' ordinance may be considered in arriving at the determination of negligence ve.l non, in the absence of any allegation in regard to the ordinance.. The writer confesses that, if it were a new question, he .would be disposed to require more specific allegations in regard to negligence, yet if is settled by former adjudications that very general averments, “little short of legal conclusions',” are sufficient. The ordinance, in this case, was merely a fact bearing upon the question as to whether the defendant's agents were guilty of negligence.—Robertson v. Wabash, St. L. & Pac. Ry., 84 Mo. 119, 121; Goodwin v. Chicago, Rock Island, etc. Ry., 75 Mo. 73, 75, 76; Elyton Land Co. v. Mingea, 89 Ala. 521-530, 7 South. 666. The running of the locomotive at a greater rate of speed than that allowed by city ordinance has been held by this court to constitute negligence.—S. & N. Ala. R. R. v. Donovan, 84 Ala. 141, 147, 4 South. 142, and case cited; also Elyton Land Co. Case, supra. Hence, although the fifth charge requested by the. plaintiff might haw been mox’e clearly expressed, there was error in giving it.

5. The language of charge 6, given at the request of the plaintiff, has been so often approved by this court that it must be considered correct.—L. & N. R. R. v. Kelton, 112 Ala. 533, 536, 537, 21 South. 819; Ala. Mid. Ry. v. McGill, 121 Ala. 231, 25 South. 731, 77 Am. St. Rep. 52. It is true, as suggested by counsel for appellant, that if the locomotive in question wex’e equipped with some extraordinary appliance, bv which it could be stopped within the distance* to which the *399headlight throws the light, it would not be within the rule, yet we understand the expression, “ordinary means and appliances,” to refer to the ordinary or customary means and appliances at the command of that particular train or locomotive.

As to the other suggestion, that in this case there ivas no evidence of disturbing causes which nullified the effect of the headlight, if that were the case it .would not be true, as stated in the charge, that the negligence mentioned proximately contributed to the injury. If defendant desired án explanation on this point, it could have requested an explanatory charge.

6. Charge 7, given at the request of the plaintiff is governed by the same'principles, and there was no error in giving it.

7. Charge B was properly given.

8. Charge C is subject to the infirmity that it did not hypothesize any causal connection between the negligence and the injury, and should not have been given, and the same is true of charge D. Also is assumes that the stock belonged to the plaintiff and was struck by the locomotive, and does not hypothesize that it was within the city limits.

9. From what has been previously said, charge E should have been refused.

10. Charge. M should have been refused. It is unintelligible, inasmuch as it instructs the jury to add interest to the “value of the stock found by them.” They were not charged with the duty of finding any stock, but with the duty of ascertaining whether the defendant had killed or injured any stock belonging to the plaintiff, and whether such killing or injury resulted from negligence.

Counsel for appellee insists that, though some of the charges given at the request of plaintiff be “bad,” or “too broad,” yet, as all the charges must be construed together, if, taking them all together, the law be correctly stated, the court should not reverse because a single instruction, taken by itself, is too broad. The rulings in some other jurisdictions on this subject' are slightly different from our own. 1 Yet, under our' stat*400utes and decisions, tv Idle it is true that the jury considers all the charges given, and the oral charge of the court is construed as a whole, yet erroneous statements in written charges are not corrected by correct statements made in the oral or other charge of the court. Under such a rule it would be impossible to tell ayhether the jury followed the correct statement or the incorrect statement of the laiv. “An instruction Avhich attempts to cover the Avhole case, and authorizes a finding for one party or the other, according as the jury may determine certain facts, is erroneous, if its omits any material issue; and such error is not cured by another instruction properly submitting the omitted issue.” — 1 Blashfield’s Instructions to Juries, p. 911, § 391; Code 1896, § 3328, and cases cited.

The judgment of the court is reversed, and the cause remanded.

Tyson, C. J., and Haralson and Denson, JJ., concur.