Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Young

45 So. 238, 153 Ala. 232, 1907 Ala. LEXIS 207
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 19, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 45 So. 238 (Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Young) 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. Young, 45 So. 238, 153 Ala. 232, 1907 Ala. LEXIS 207 (Ala. 1907).

Opinion

McCELLLAN, J.

— The salient facts of this case may be found set forth in L. & N. R. R. Go. v. Bcmhs, Adm’r, 132 Ala. 471, 31 South. 573. It was then ruled that the complaint charged simple negligence only, and on the succeeding trial below it does not appear to have been altered in that respect. Since Lawrence, the intestate, was palpably guilty of initial negligence in heedlessly stepping on the track in front of the approaching engine (we include the attached tender in the term), the only theory on which plaintiff could recover was that afforded by the asserted subsequent negligence of Engineer McDermott resulting in the fatal injury of intestate after he passed beneath the engine. And to sustain this theory it was incumbent upon the plaintiff to establish to the reasonable satisfaction of the jury first, that af[235]*235ter becoming aware of intestate’s peril the engineer failed to exercise due care and diligence to stop the engine and avert injury to him; and, second, that as the proximate consequence of this negligence, if found, Lawrence was injured to his death. It necessarily follows that the initial negligence of Lawrence could not operate to bar a recovery under the doctrine of contributory negligence, because the causation present in his initial negligence was, in the event, interrupted by the alleged subsequent negligence of the engineer, and that initial negligence became the remote cause or condition of his fatal injury, and the subsequent negligence, if the fatal injury attended it, the proximate cause thereof. In other words, the burden assumed by the plaintiff carried the obligation to remove the taint of the initial negligence of Lawrence by sustaining to the requisite degree the charge of the subsequent negligence of the engineer, and also the essential condition to a recovery, viz., that the fatal injury was the proximate result of the subsequent negligence stated. If the initial negligence could be invoked to defeat a recovery, notwithstanding the subsequent negligence of the party charged, and to which latter negligence the injury is ascribable for its proximate cause, the fundamental principle in the law of negligence to liability, viz., proximate cause, would be denied effect. Of course, we do not intend to be understood as asserting that contributory negligence may not intervene to bar a recovery when subsequent negligence is pleaded to fix liability. But we do propose to hold that, to constitute contributory negligence to defeat a recovery, it •must be such negligence on the part of the injured party as is subsequent to or concurrent with the subsequent negligence of the party charged. For instance, if, after the injured party and the party charged have become aware of the imperiled situatiou of the former, the for[236]*236mer fails to conserve his own safety as due ca: .■ and diligence requires, and this negligence on his part is subsequent to or concurs with that of the party charged, and the injury proximately results therefrom, the negligence of the injured party is contributory, and he cannot recover. These propositions are sustained by the following authoxfities: L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Brown, 121 Ala. 221, 25 South. 609; Central of Ca. R. R. v. Lamb, 124 Ala. 172, 26 South. 969; Railroad v. Webb, 97 Ala. 308, 12 South. 374; L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Hurt, 101 Ala. 34, 13 South. 130; Burgess’ Case, 116 Ala. 509, 22 South. 913; Johnson v. Railway Co., 149 Ala. 529, 43 South. 35; Foshee’s Case, 125 Ala. 226, 27 South. 1006.

If the conteixtion of appellant’s couxisel is that initial negligence is contributory negligence barring a recovery, unless the injuxy is wantonly or willfully inflicted — that one who is primarily in fault in placing himself in a positioxx of peril cannot recover for an injury suffered, unless the injury is the proximate consequence of the' wanton or willful misconduct of the party charged — ■ the insistence is answered and refuted in the authorities cited. The Mitchell (134 Ala. 261, 32 South. 735) and Haley (113 Ala. 640, 21 South. 357) Cases, asserting, if, indeed, they do, the principle appellant conteixds for, and collating the earlier decisions in support thereof, have been many times in effect qualified in respect of the necessity, in order for the plaintiff, initially negligent, to recover, that his injury must have proximately resxxlted from the willful or wanton misconduct of the party charged. There can be no doubt, on this record, that McDexmxott, the engineer, was aware of the intestate’s peril when he saw him in the act of going upon the track in front of the approaching engine. The duty of the engineer was, then, to do all in his power, to use all appliances at hand proxnptly and in proper order, known to [237]*237prudent and skillful engineers, to stop the engine, not only with a view to averting an injury, hut to prevent an aggravation of it. Good faith and honest intention or belief may be potent in determining whether a wrong is the result of willfulness or wantonness, but it is not availing to refute an imputation of negligence, because, wliile good faith and honest intention or belief must characterize the performance of the duty, it is the act itself, and not the intent, that denominates acts or omissions as negligent. — Authorities supra; Birmingham Ry. & Elec. Co. v. Pinckard, 124 Ala. 372, 26 South. 880; Campbell’s Case, 121 Ala. 50, 25 South. 793 ( 77 Am. St. Rep. 17.

Though this was the engineer’s duty, we cannot affirm, as a matter of law, that it was or was not his duty, as well, to expend his energy and time in giving the warning signal, that Lawrence, then imperiled or about to become so, might bring into play his powers to conserve his own safety. That was a condition of negligence vel non of the engineer, and whether he was so or not was an inquiry for the jury under all the circumstances of the event. It is conceivable that the moments vital to life or limb might be vainly wasted by the devotion of energy and time to signals, rather than to the application of agencies at hand to stop a moving engine. But it is also clear that an engineer in charge of an engine moving toward one in peril does not perform his duty if he gives no warning signals to awaken or quicken the party in peril to the natural impulse, as well as the legal duty, to conserve his own safety, unless it was reasonably apparent from the situation presented to the engineer as one ordinarily prudent and skillful in that station that to Avarn would be unavailing. Whether, in this case, the engineer, as a reasonably prudent and skilled operative, Avas or was not negligent in sounding the [238]*238alarm as and for such time he did was for the jury, with the burden to establish it to their reasonable satisfaction resting on the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
45 So. 238, 153 Ala. 232, 1907 Ala. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-nashville-railroad-v-young-ala-1907.