Louisville & Nashville R. R. v. Gray
This text of 67 So. 687 (Louisville & Nashville R. R. v. Gray) 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.
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The plaintiff was injured while at work, or while he claims that he was at work, on a dead engine in a roundhouse at Decatur. The injury occurred about 1 o’clock at night. While the plaintiff was at work, or claims that he was at work, on the engine, another engine was run into the roundhouse, and, while this latter engine was being put in place, it struck a tank, causing it to collide with the dead engine upon which the plaintiff was at work, or upon which he claims he was at work, and the plaintiff thus received painful and serious injuries.
We do not know why the trial court sustained the plaintiff’s objection to the question calling for the above testimony, but the record shows the ruling and an appropriate exception. It seems to be a rule of universal application, in cases of this sort, that a defendant, to sustain a plea of contributory negligence, may show that, at the time of the injury, the servant was violating a rule of the master, and that he knew of the existence of the rule, provided, of course, the violation of the rule had a causal connection, or probably had a causal connection with the injury. The record in this case fails to show any reason why the master did not have the right to show the existence of this rule, and knowledge of its existence on the part of the servant, by the testimony of the plaintiff himself. The testimony sought to be elicited was relevant and material, and, in sustaining the plaintiff’s objection to the question calling for it, the trial court committed reversible error.
2. There are many questions presented by briefs of counsel, which we have not above discussed. This is an ordinary suit under the Employer’s Liability Act, and the other questions discussed in briefs of counsel, to which we make no reference in this opinion, have [517]*517been frequently before the courts, and fully determined, and we deem it unnecessary to discuss them.
Reversed and remanded.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
67 So. 687, 191 Ala. 514, 1914 Ala. LEXIS 773, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-nashville-r-r-v-gray-ala-1914.