Alabama Power Co. v. Lewis

141 So. 229, 224 Ala. 594, 1932 Ala. LEXIS 115
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 28, 1932
Docket3 Div. 994.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 141 So. 229 (Alabama Power Co. v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alabama Power Co. v. Lewis, 141 So. 229, 224 Ala. 594, 1932 Ala. LEXIS 115 (Ala. 1932).

Opinion

KNIGHT, J.

Suit for recovery of damages for personal injuries, instituted in the circuit court of Montgomery county by Mrs. Libbie Yass Lewis against the Alabama Power Company. Prom a judgment for plaintiff, the appeal is prosecuted.

It is earnestly argued by appellant that count 1 of the complaint is defective, and subject to the demurrer directed thereto.

The plaintiff stated her case in two counts. While there was a demurrer to each of the counts, and the same overruled, yet, on this appeal, no error is assigned to the action of the court in overruling appellant’s demurrer to the second count. We are justified, therefore, in assuming that appellant considered count 2 as stating a good cause of action against it.

It is apparent that under count 2, which is confessedly good, all testimony competent under the first count might have been introduced. It was incumbent upon the plaintiff to make the same proof and the same degree of proof under count one, as the case was developed, as she was required to make under count„2. And likewise, the same defense open to defendant under count 1 was available to it under count 2. Therefore, if it were conceded that couht 1 was defective in the respects pointed out by the demurrer, this court would not reverse for such an error. It would be error without injury. Furthermore, the whole case was tried, as appears from the bill of exceptions, on the stated averments of negligence in count 2. Bond Bros. v. Kay et al. (Ala. Sup.) 136 So. 817; 1 Henderson Law Co. v. Hinson, 157 Ala. 640, 47 So. 717; Ander *597 son. v. Robinson, 182 Ala. 615, 62 So. 512, 47 L. R. A. (N. S.) 3302, Ann. Cas. 1915D, 829.

It is next insisted tbat tbe court committed reversible error in permitting plaintiff, over tbe objection of defendant, to read in evidence tbe ordinance of tbe city of Montgomery, set out in thé record in tbis case. It is insisted tbat, inasmuch as tbe complaint did not set but the ordinance, or refer thereto, tbe ordinance could not be introduced in evidence in tbis ease, which counted only upon simple negligence.

Tbis raises one of tbe most serious questions presented by the record. Appellee insists tbat tbis court has firmly committed itself to tbe admissibility of such ordinances iu cases where simple negligence is counted on for a recovery. In support of her insistence, we are referred to tbe following cases, among others: Douglass v. Central of Georgia R. Co., 201 Ala. 395, 78 So. 457, 458; Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Moerlein Brewing Co., 150 Ala. 390, 43 So. 723; Ala. Great So. R. Co. v. McDaniel, 192 Ala. 639, 69 So. 60; Mobile Light & R. Co. v. Burch, 12 Ala. App. 421, 429, 68 So. 509; Yarbrough v. Carter, 179 Ala. 356, 60 So. 833; 45 C. J. 1070.

It becomes necessary, therefore, to review the above authorities to ascertain whether or not they are in point in this case, in view of the objections interposed in the court below to the introduction of the ordinance in question; that is, to see if the ordinances admitted in evidence in the above cases were pleaded or referred to in the complaints in those cases. In the ease of Douglass v. Central of Georgia R. Co., supra, on the original hearing, Mr. Justice Mayfield, speaking for the court, said: “There was no error in declining to allow the plaintiff to introduce an ordinance of the town in which the property was situated, fixing the speed at which trains should move within the corporate limits. There was no allegation that the injury complained of proximately resulted from a violation of such ordinance, nor was there any allegation that the train was being operated in a wanton or willful manner, which proximately resulted in the injury complained of. Without some such allegation or issue, we do not see how this ordinance was admissible.” On rehearing, Mr. Justice McClellan, speaking for the majority, said: “The ruling of the trial court in excluding the ordinance of Alexander City, governing the speed of locomotives in that municipality, was error under the authority of this court’s recent deliverance in Southern R. Co. v. Stonewall Ins. Co., 177 Ala. 327, 337, 58 So. 313, Ann. Cas. 1915A, 987.” It appears from the original record in the Stonewall Ins. Co. Case that the specific objection made to the introduction of the ordinance was: “The defendant objected to the introduction of said ordinance on the ground that it is totally irrelevant and. immaterial to the case.” Of course the court, in passing upon the objection, could only consider the ground assigned, and, if it did not properly point out the objection, the court was compelled to overrule it, no matter how many other valid grounds of objection it was subject to. This was, in fact, pointed out by Judge McClellan on the rehearing in the Douglass Case, supra. In his opinion in the Douglass Case, Justice McClellan says: “There was no objection to the ordinance in the present case on the specific ground that the ordinance was not declared on in the complaint.” As confirmatory of this position, the grounds of objection are then stated in extenso. This is, then, persuasive of the conclusion that the holding was, in fact, predicated upon the failure of the objector to assign a proper and apt ground of objection.

The present case, on this point, is easily distinguishable from the case of Douglass v. Central of Georgia R. Co., supra, and the case of Southern R. Co. v. Stonewall Ins. Co., 177 Ala. 327, 58 So. 313, Ann. Cas. 1915A, 987, for in the present case appellant interposed, as grounds of objection to the introduction in evidence of the ordinance, the following, among other grounds: “That there was no pleading in the case setting up or involving said city ordinance; that said city ordinance had not been pleaded, and was not therefore admissible, or germane, or material to the issue in the case; and that without pleading said ordinance in the complaint, plaintiff could not introduce it.”

In the case of Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Moerlein Brewing Co., 150 Ala. 390, 43 So. 723, 726, cited by appellee, the report of the case does not show that any valid objection was interposed to the introduction in evidence of the ordinance, but the question was presented for review by a charge given at the instance of the plaintiff. (We have examined the original transcript in the case and we find that the ordinance was introduced in evidence without objection of any kind. Original transcript volume page 1806.) In reviewing the question, it was said by Judge Simpson: “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 vel non, in the absence of any allegation in regard to the ordinance. The writer confesses that, if it was a mere question, he would be disposed to require more specific allegations in regard to negligence, yet it is settled by former adjudications that very general aver-ments, ‘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 *598 of negligence. It will be noticed that this learned judge cited in support of his conclusion the case of Elyton Land Co. v. Mingea, 89 Ala. 521, 7 So. 666.

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Bluebook (online)
141 So. 229, 224 Ala. 594, 1932 Ala. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alabama-power-co-v-lewis-ala-1932.