Brown v. Yielding
This text of 90 So. 499 (Brown v. Yielding) 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.
Opinion
Several other assignments relating to the exclusion of questions propounded to witness by plaintiff’s counsel are 'without merit, and indeed are not sufficiently argued to merit consideration.
“The driver of an automobile approaching a pedestrian upon a street, must have his car under such control as that it may be promptly stopped, and must sound such warning to annormce the approach of the automobile as to make a collision improbable.”
This charge is manifestly bad. There is no duty to keep a car under such control, unless it would be apparent to a reasonably prudent man that the failure to do so would be dangerous to the pedestrian, or unless the pedestrian were in such a position on the highway that a reasonably prudent man, observing him, would take that precaution. Nor is there any duty to so warn the pedestrian as to “make a collision improbable.”
Charge Nó. 11, refused to plaintiff, is subject to the same infirmity as charge 10, and was also properly refused.
“That Yielding [the driver) had the right, exercising reasonable care, to drive past the point where the plaintiff was standing, and was not required to stop his automobile before proceeding past such point, unless he had reasonable cause to believe that so driving past would endanger the plaintiff.”
Appellant’s chief criticism of this charge is that it does not require the belief of the driver to be the belief of a reasonably careful and prudent man. But reasonable cause *506 for believing a thing as a fact has always been defined as such grounds of belief as would warrant a cautious man in the conclusion that it is true. Jordan v. A. G. S. R. R. Co., 81 Ala. 220, 8 South. 191; Hanchey v. Brunson, 175 Ala. 236, 56 South. 971, Ann. Cas. 1914C, 804. So, we think that the language of this charge must be held to import all that appellant contends it should have expressed. We hold that it correctly states the right and duty of a car driver under the circumstances shown. None of the eases cited and discussed by appellant’s counsel hold anything to the contrary with respect to a charge framed in the language of this one.
In conclusion, we may add that the oral charge instructed the jury clearly and fully as to the issues in the casé, and as to the duty of both parties in their use of the street, and they could not reasonably have misunderstood either the law of the case or its application to the facts in evidence.
Finding no prejudicial error in the record, the judgment will be affirmed.
Affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
90 So. 499, 206 Ala. 504, 1921 Ala. LEXIS 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-yielding-ala-1921.