Callaway v. Eason

28 So. 2d 560, 248 Ala. 523, 1946 Ala. LEXIS 142
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 7, 1946
Docket6 Div. 429.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 28 So. 2d 560 (Callaway v. Eason) 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
Callaway v. Eason, 28 So. 2d 560, 248 Ala. 523, 1946 Ala. LEXIS 142 (Ala. 1946).

Opinion

SIMPSON, Justice.

Richmond Joseph Eason walked in front of an on-coming train of the defendant and was killed. The suit is under the Homicide Act, Code 1940, Tit. 7, § 123, and counted for recovery on subsequent negligence and wantonness. From a judgment for the plaintiff defendant brings this appeal. We entertain the opinion the result of the trial cannot be sustained under either theory.

The claim of negligence rested on alleged misconduct of the engineer in the operation of the train after discovery of peril, so the question was whether after discovering intestate’s plight, the engineer employed all available means to avert the accident. If so, then there could be no recovery on this theory. Louisville & Nashville Railroad Co. v. Markee, Adm’x, 103 Ala. 160, 172, 15 So. 511, 49 Am.St.Rep. 21; Central of Georgia R. Co. v. Bates, 225 Ala. 519(2), 144 So. 9.

*526 The main track where Mr. Eason met his death was paralleled by a side or passing track and, though in a gradual curve at that place, .-the tracks generally ran east and west. The accident occurred about 11 o’clock in the day, approximately 3,000 feet west of the little station of Kellyton. The train, an engine and sixty-two freight cars, some loaded and some empty, had passed Kellyton and was proceeding west toward Birmingham at a speed of approximately 40 miles an hour.

The defendant offered no evidence and the substance and effect of the testimony of the only eyewitness to the accident, the engineer, Mullins, was: After his train rounded the curve and approached the point where the tragedy occurred, he observed two men (estimating) about three to five hundred feet ahead, walking eastwardly, single file on the passing track, in the direction of and facing the train; when the train was within about 200 feet of the men they suddenly changed their course and turned from the side track on which they were walking, toward the main line, whereupon he immediately sounded the whistle, applied the brakes and sanded the rails, which method of braking was the most efficient way to stop the train. The two men, however, did not stop but continued their course across the main track. The companion of the deceased succeeded in getting across, but Eason was struck by the end sill of the engine as he was in the act of clearing the outside rail and was instantly killed. The train stopped in about the minimum distance within which it could have been stopped after applying the brakes and sand. The train had already blown for Kellyton crossing and had given a station blow a mile before reaching Kellyton and the bell was ringing automatically when the train passed the station and continued to ring until after the accident. The witness was keeping a lookout ahead when the train rounded the curve, though one does not do so continuously, since, in operating the' engine, certain gauges and instruments in the interior of the cab command some attention.

This was the uncontroverted, positive testimony on which recovery for subsequent negligence was based.

It is insisted for the plaintiff that adverse-inferences, presenting a conflict, arise from the testimony of another of plaintiff’s witnesses (Kitchens), where he stated he did not recollect hearing or did not hear the whistle blow and “couldn’t say about- the-bell ringing” after the train passed Kelly-ton. The argument is that the jury could infer from this testimony that the bell was not ringing and the warning whistle was-not blown as the engineer insisted they-were when he saw the two men turn toward the main track.

Whether the negative evidence of a' witness, that he did not recollect hearing or did not hear the bell ring or whistle-blow, is evidence that it did not occur so as to raise a conflict when there was positive evidence that the bell did ring or whistle-did blow, as the case may be, depends largely on the circumstances, and whether the witness was in a position to hear and his hearing not obstructed or he was paying attention to what occurred. In some cases it has been held not sufficient to create a conflict (Fayet v. St. Louis & S. F. R. Co., 203 Ala. 3(2), 81 So. 671, cited in Southern R. Co. v. Miller, 226 Ala. 366, 369, 147 So. 149, and in Louisiana & Arkansas Ry. Co. v. Jackson et al., 5 Cir., 95 F.2d 369; Chilcote v. Chicago & N. W. R. Co., 206 Iowa 1093, 221 N.W. 771); in others it has been held to require a verdict by the jury. Mobile & Ohio R. Co. v. Davis, 223 Ala. 600(16), 137 So. 525; Louisville & Nashville R. Co. v. York, Adm’x, etc., 128 Ala. 305(12), 30 So. 676; 32 C.J.S., Evidence, § 1037, pp. 1081, 1082; Alabama Great Southern R. v. Russey, 190 Ala. 239,, 67 So. 445. The circumstances here shown, are not sufficient to justify a theory that, there was a conflict in the evidence in that respect.

Standing alone, or if it had been-shown that Kitchens’ hearing was good, that he was watching or giving attention to the fact when the accident occurred and did not, in fact, hear any signals sound,, this testimony would have been enough, under the scintilla rule, to take the case to the-jury. However, this was not the true import of his testimony. He further testified (seven years after the accident) that, at *527 his blacksmith shop at Kellyton where he was at the time, the train had already passed (we gather from other parts of the record the engine was some quarter-mile past and out of view) and he had no interest in it at that time, did not know there had been an accident until it had stopped and could not say, as a matter of fact, whether it did or did not give either of these warning signals and could not recall “one way or the other” about it. The effect of his testimony then is neither an affirmation nor a denial of the controverted fact. Under the rule of the foregoing authorities, in the face of the positive testimony of engineer Mullins and one other of the plaintiff’s witnesses that the bell was ringing and the warning whistle was blown, the uncertain negative testimony pf the-witness Kitchens cannot, in the disclosed ■circumstances, be regarded as presenting a .conflict.

We have given the case our stu■dious consideration after reading the testimony in- consultation, and feel bound to reach the conclusion’ that the evidence wholly failed to make out a case of subsequent negligence. The deceased and his-companion were in no danger while walking toward and facing the train on the passing track. There was nothing to indicate that they were not in the proper exercise-of their senses or that they would not continue to perform the obvious duty of keeping their course and avoiding the approaching train, and no situation was presented :to impress a reasonable person that they would expose themselves to danger until they changed their course and turned .toward the main line. When this occurred, ■.the engineer immediately exercised every means at his command to avert the accident .and hence was guilty of no negligence after thus becoming aware of their perilous situation. Bason v. Alabama Great Southern R. Co., 179 Ala. 299, 303, 60 So. 922; Northern Alabama R. Co. v. Henson, 210 Ala. 356, 98 So. 18, 19.

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Bluebook (online)
28 So. 2d 560, 248 Ala. 523, 1946 Ala. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/callaway-v-eason-ala-1946.