Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Orr

121 Ala. 489
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 121 Ala. 489 (Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Orr) 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
Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Orr, 121 Ala. 489 (Ala. 1898).

Opinion

McCLELLAN, C. J.

— The complaint contains three counts. The first alleges that Hannah Orr, plaintiff’s intestate, on Nov. 16, 1895, laAvfully attempted to cross the track of the defendant, the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Go. “in and on College street in the incorporated city of Hardsell, at which place the public are invited to cross said track, and do cross said track, in large numbers continuously, and in thus attempting to cross the track of the defendant, in a laAvful and proper manner,- — the defendant Avas through and by its agents and employés running and operating a certain freight train ' along its track through the said city and across the said College street at a high and dangerous rate of speed, to-Avit, about thirty-five or forty miles an hour, Avithout sounding the Avliistle of the locomotive, or ringing the bell thereof, or giving any kind or character of danger signal whatsoever as required by law, — the plaintiff’s intestate Avas struck by the said locomotive, train, or cars of the defendant and violently throAvn to the ground, thereby being maimed and killed. That the death of plaintiff’s intestate Avas the result of the care-[496]*496Jessness, negligence and recklessness of the defendant corporation, its agents, or employés* * * in operating the said train as set out above.” The second count avers that “plaintiff’s intestate while lawfully going along and through College street, in the town of Hartsell, Alabama, a populous and much traveled street, where the public are invited to travel and cross said railroad, and where they do cross in large numbers continuously, and one of the main thoroughfares of said town of Hart-sell, an incorporated city, the said defendant was by and through its agents or employés * * * operating and running a locomotive and train of cars along its track, through said incorporated city, and across the said College street, at a high and extremely dangerous rate of speed, to-wit, about thirty-five or forty miles per hour, whereby plaintiff’s intestate was struck by the said locomotive or train, and violently hurled to the ground and killed, by and through the negligence, carelessness and wantonness of the defendant corporation, its agents or employés * * * in operating the said train as above set out.” The third count is as follows: “The plaintiff claims of the defendant the like sum of nineteen hundred and ninety-nine dollars damages for that heretofore, to-wit, on or about the 16th day of November, 1895, while the plaintiff’s intestate was lawfully and carefully walking along College street in the incorporated city of Hartsell, Alabama, in the discharge of her lawful and necessary duties, the defendant corporation was through and by its agents or employés * * * * operating a locomotive and. train of cars along its track in said incorporated town, at a high and dangerous rate of speed, to-Avit, thirty-five or forty miles per hour, without sounding the Avhistle, ringing the bell, or without giving any other kind or character of signal or warning of danger; whereupon plaintiff’s intestate was struck by said locomotive or train of cars of the defendant corporation and violently thrown to the ground and killed by and through the willful acts, gross negligence, reckless, carelessness and wantonness of the defendant corporation, its agents or employés in thus operating said train,” etc., etc.

A plea of contributory negligence to the whole complaint was held bad on demurrer, on the theory that the [497]*497complaint charged the death of the intestate to wantonness or willfulness on the part of the defendant’s em-ployés.

It is very clear that the first and second counts do not charge wantonness or willfulness. The running of a train at the alleged high and dangerous rate of thirty-fiye or forty miles an hour through a populous towfi and over a street crossing where persons have a right to cross and do cross in great numbers continuously, with or without signals of approach does not necessarily involve an intention on the part of the trainmen to hill, or such reckless disregard of probable consequences as would amount to wantonness. If the operatives did not know the character of the place, did not know that people were wont to be or to pass there in such numbers and with such frequency that there was a likelihood or a probability that persons or a person would be there or passing there at the time of approach, it cannot be said that they had in mind to injure such persons, or that their conduct was so recklessly indifferent as to consequences to such persons as evidenced wanton speculation and trifling with human life. The facts averred in these counts might be evidentially sufficient to authorize a jury to infer that the trainmen had knowledge or notice of the dangerous character of the crossing; but that is not sufficient in pleading. The main fact necessary to be found must be alleged. Whether the jury find it to be proved or not is another question. It was open to them on these averments to find that the trainmen did not have this knowledge or notice, and thus to have found them guilty of wantonness or willfulness, if the counts should be held to so charge, when they in fact had at the time no conception that there was a likelihood or a probability or any real danger of running over a person at that place. If such was the case, they could have been guilty of negligence only, and not wantonness or willfulness. And in recognition of this, the pleader himself in the first count ascribes the intestate’s death to “carelessness, negligence, and recklessness,” which is no more than a charge of negligence.—K. C. M. & B. R. R. Co. v. Crocker, 95 Ala. 412, 432 — and in the second count to “negligence, carelessness and wantonness,” [498]*498.which is bad for repugnancy.—Memphis & Charleston Railroad Co. v. Martin, 117 Ala. 367, 382 — and really avers, in the alternative, either negligence or wanton' ness, since an act cannot be done through inadvertence, involving of course the absence of all mental action in .respect of it, and at the same time be done wantonly, that is with a sense of what is passing accompanied by a conscious disregard of consequences implying a willingness to inflict injury, and, construing the count against the pleader, it must be held to charge negligence only.— Martin’s Case, supra. So that both upon the particular facts alleged, and upon the general charge of fault made in each of these counts, it is plain that they charge negll gence only, and not willfulness or wantonness.—Ga. Pac. Ry. Co. v. Lee, 92 Ala. 262; Louisville & Nashville Railroad Co. v. Brotan, (MS.) present term.

The third count is of somewhat more difficult interpretation. It in terms ascribes intestate’s death to the “willful acts, gross negligence, reckless carelessness and wantonness” of the defendant’s employes. For one to kill another by a willful or wanton act implies an intentional killing or a situation of danger within the consciousness of the actor and such conduct on his part with reference to that situation as implies a reckless indifference to the probable consequences of the course he pursues.

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Bluebook (online)
121 Ala. 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-nashville-railroad-v-orr-ala-1898.