Birmingham Railway, Light & Power Co. v. Williams

69 So. 586, 194 Ala. 171, 1915 Ala. LEXIS 232
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 20, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 69 So. 586 (Birmingham Railway, Light & Power Co. v. Williams) 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
Birmingham Railway, Light & Power Co. v. Williams, 69 So. 586, 194 Ala. 171, 1915 Ala. LEXIS 232 (Ala. 1915).

Opinion

MAYFIELD, J. —

The action is to recover damages for personal injuries received on account of a collision between an electric street car and a wagon in which plaintiff was riding. The two vehicles were, just a moment before the accident, traveling in the same general direction and along the same street, and at the moment of the accident the wagon was attempting to cross the car track. The street for wagon traffic, and the car line, were on the same grade; only the rails were above the surface of the bed. of the street.

(1) The action was originally brought against the Birmingham Railway, Light & Power Company alone, but the' complaint was amended by adding the Edge-wood Electric Railway Company as a defendant. It seems that the two corporations were separate entities, but had a physical connection between the two lines, and that the latter corporation’s tracks and lines thus [173]*173formed a physical extension of one of the former company’s lines. There was a joint traffic arrangement between the two companies, and they had in part the same stockholders, the same officers, and the same traffic manager, and the employees, such as conductors, were assigned by the officers from one company or line to another, as the necessity arose, but each, in part at least, had separate conductors and motormen. All, however, were paid at the same office, that of the former company, and by the same timekeepers, bookkeepers, treasurers, etc., and the conductors and motormen wore different uniforms when working for either company. The accident happened on the track of the latter company.

The defendant Birmingham Railway, Light & Power Company objected to many questions propounded to witnesses, seeking to elicit evidence as to whether cars of that company were operated on the lines or tracks of the other company, and as to whether the conductors and motormen of the one line did not, on their runs, go from one line to the other, and also excepted to each ruling allowing such questions to be answered. There was no error in any of these rulings. Such evidence was clearly competent and proper, owing to circumstances of this case, to enable the jury to ascertain which of the two companies should respond for the acts of the servants or agents in charge of the particular car on the occasion in question, as well as to show or tend to show that the relations, connections, and arrangements between the two companies were such as to make each responsible to strangers or the public for the wrongs of both in connection with their joint arrangement, if the jury should find that such an arrangement existed. — See Central of Georgia Railway Co. v. Wood, 129 Ala. 483, 29 South. 775. All those questions inquiring whether cars of one company were operated on the lines of the other, and [174]*174whether the same servants and agents operated cars on both lines, and whether the servants and agents of each were paid at the same office and by the same officers, and were hired and discharged by the same officers, were-therefore competent and legal.

(2) There was no error in allowing the amendment to the complaint by adding a new defendant. It does not appear that any injury resulted therefrom, or that any surprise or delay was caused thereby, sufficient to constitute reversible error. We do not think, under the facts as shown by this record, that there was an abuse of the discretion of the trial court in this respect.

(3) There was a great number of exceptions reserved to various portions of excerpts of the oral charge of the court. Some of these excerpts, standing alone, would probably be erroneous, or would possess such necessary tendencies to mislead as would constitute them error; but when the charge is considered as a whole, either the defects are cured; or it is made to appear that the appellant should have counteracted any possible misleading tendencies by requested charges.

There was no error in refusing any of the defendant’s requested charges. The liability of either or both of the defendants, under the issues and the evidence as shown by the record, was a question for the jury, under proper instructions from the court.

Affirmed.

Anderson, C. J., and Somerville and Thomas, J.J., concur.

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Related

Central of Georgia Railway Co. v. Wood
129 Ala. 483 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1900)

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Bluebook (online)
69 So. 586, 194 Ala. 171, 1915 Ala. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birmingham-railway-light-power-co-v-williams-ala-1915.