Mobile Light R. Co. v. R. O. Harris Grocery Co.
This text of 88 So. 55 (Mobile Light R. Co. v. R. O. Harris Grocery Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This is the second appeal in this case, and on the former appeal this court undertook at some length to lay down the proper rules as applicable to the facts there presented. M. L. & Ry. Co. v. Harris Gro. Co., 84 South. 867. 1 On the second trial in the circuit court, at which the plaintiff again recovered judgment, the trial proceeded, with marked precision, well within the rules as declared in the former appeal. The facts in this record as applicable to the question presented in this appeal, are entirely similar, and present little change from those appearing in the record of the first appeal.
*661
The above is equally applicable to the second assignment of error, based on the action of the court in overruling defendant’s objection to the witness Shaw as to the value of the truck just after the accident.
■ “If persons or property be upon or dangerously near the track of the street railway, the car may be, with skilled application of stopping appliances, stopped, and injury thereto averted.” Anniston Elec. Go. v. Rosen, 159 Ala. 195, 48 South. 798, 183 Am. St. Rep. 32.
It seems to us that the statement of the foregoing rule as heretofore laid down by this court and the Supreme Court will he sufficient to support the conclusion that the trial court did not err in refusing the affirmative charge to the first count. The surrounding circumstances, the populous thoroughfare, the testimony of Poole that his car had been standing on the track for several minutes, the testimony of other witnesses that the truck was stopped on the track, the nature ■of the accident itself, all tending to disprove the theory of defendant, that the truck .was moving along the track ahead-of the street ■car together with other circumstances not necessary to here enumerate, made this a jury question.
It follows from the foregoing that the court did not err in refusing the general charge for the defendant.
This disposes of all the assignments of error. We find no error in the record, and the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Ante, p. 354,
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88 So. 55, 17 Ala. App. 659, 1921 Ala. App. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mobile-light-r-co-v-r-o-harris-grocery-co-alactapp-1921.