Scarpulla v. Giardina

96 So. 593, 209 Ala. 550, 1923 Ala. LEXIS 515
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 10, 1923
Docket6 Div. 774.
StatusPublished

This text of 96 So. 593 (Scarpulla v. Giardina) 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
Scarpulla v. Giardina, 96 So. 593, 209 Ala. 550, 1923 Ala. LEXIS 515 (Ala. 1923).

Opinion

MÍLLER, J.

Rosario Scarpulla, as admin-5 istrator of the estate of Arcangelo Scarpulla,’ deceased, appellant, brings this suit against Paul Giardina and Mike Giardina, individually and as partners doing business under, the firm name of Giardina Bros. It is an' action by appellant, the plaintiff below, for damages under section 2485 of the- Code of ’ 1907, charging that Mike Giardina, while in' charge of and operating a motor truck of' Giardina Bros, in the ordinary course of the-firm’s business, negligently drove or moved, the truck over or upon the body of Arcangelo Scarpulla, a three year old son of the administrator, inflicting injuries on the child, from which as a proximate result thereof he died. • The jury returned a verdict in favor of the-defendant. Judgment was rendered on it by the court. From it the plaintiff prosecuted-this appeal, and assigned as errors separately-four written charges requested by the defendant, which were given by the court.

Giardina Bros, were engaged in the- gro-! eery business. About 5 o’clock in the after-’ noon of August 17, 1921, Mike Giardina, a'member of the firm, drove the truck of the" partnership in front of the house of Pete' Scarpulla, brother of plaintiff, and parked’ it at an angle with, the left side being next1 to, the curb. He stopped the engine, got out’ of the truck, went to the rear of it, opened; the door, took out groceries, and carried them'into the house of Pete Scarpulla. He saw-’ no child in the street or vicinity of' the car-’ when he stopped and left it. He remained in-the house a few minutes, came out, bringing' an empty box, walked on the left side to the* rear of the truck, put the box in it, closed'' the door, went along the right side to the5 front end of the truck, cranked it, then got into it, looked back through the screen in the* rear of the truck, gave no signal by blowing-the horn of the car, piit his car in reverse,.- and started backwards at a rate of speed not* exceeding four miles an hour. No one was-in sight when he returned to the street, and' he saw no child on the street or in that vicin-'ity. When the truck backed he felt a bump' *552 from the left hind wheel running over something, then a bump from the front wheel, and then, as he continued to back, the child was seen by him for the first time. It was then in front of the truck. He stopped the truck, got out, picked up the child, and took him and his uncle in the truck to a hospital.

One witness testified he lived near the place; that he stepped out on his porch just before the backing of the truck, and at that time the little boy (deceased) was standing immediately back of the left rear wheel, and underneath the body of the truck. The left rear wheel struck the boy as it moved back, knocked him down, and passed over his body. The boy was three years and one month old, ■about two feet tall, and was not as tall as from the ground to the floor under the truck. He died from the wounds. Photographs of the truck, its location, streets and houses at the time and place of the injury were introduced in evidence. - (

Charge No. 3, requested by the defendant, was given by the court, and is as follows :

“The court charges the jury that, even_though you 'find from the evidence that the defendant’s chauffeur backed the truck without giving any warning, you cannot return a verdict for the plaintiff on that account, unless you further find that the failure to give a warning was the proximate cause of the fatal injuries.”

This charge invades the province of the jury, 'and is argumentative. Prom this evidence under this complaint — only one count in it- — the jury might have found that the injury was the result of two proximate or concurring causes. No verdict could be based on the failure to give warning or signal under the city ordinance before backing the car under that charge unless the jury believed from the evidence that was the proximate cause — the sole cause — of the fatal injury. They could not under that charge find it was one of the proximate causes concurring with other proximate causes to produce the injury. It was within the province of the jury under 'that one count in the complaint to find that the failure to give warning was a contributory and not the sole proximate cause of the death of the child. This was only one of other forms of negligence averred in the complaint. If the signal warning had been given, the child might have changed his position so it could have been seen by the defendant Mike Giardina, if he had looked for persons in the way before backing the truck, and thereby might have seen the child and his danger, and prevented the injury., Thus the failure of defendant to give the warning and the failure of defendant to then look for persons close enough to the car to be in danger may have both contributed to and in combination caused the result, when the former without the latter, and the latter without the former, would not have caused it.

This one count in the complaint charges that defendant negligently drove the truck against, over, or upon the body of the child. It was the duty of the chauffeur under the city ordinance to give a signal warning before backing the truck, and it was the duty of the chauffeur to look for persons in dangerous proximity to the truck before backing it. This count involves 'and includes in its allegation a breach of each of these duties. It was within the province of the jury to decide from the evidence that the child was of sufficient intelligence and instinct to ■hear and be moved by a warning signal. It was within the province of the jury under that count to find the warning signal was not given before the truck was backed, and to find if it had been given the child would have heard and heeded it by being frightened, and run, or changed his position, so, if the chauffeur had then looked before backing the truck, he could have seen the perilous position of the child; and the failure to give the warning signal and the failure then to look before backing the truck, both of which duties rested on the defendant, were jointly and concurrently the proximate cause of the injury. Under this one count in the complaint, and under the evidence, it was within the province of the jury to so decide; but charge No. 3 took it from them. The court erred in giving it to the jury. 29 Cyc. p. 652, headnotes 7 and 8; Decatur Car Wheel v. Mehaffey, 128 Ala. 242, headnotes 5 and 10, 29 South. 646; B. R., L. & P. Co. v. Wright, 153 Ala. 99, headnote 11, 44 South. 1037; Woodward Iron Co. v. Brown, 167 Ala. 316, headnote 8, 52 South. 829; Woodward Iron Co. v. Thompson, 205 Ala. 490, headnote 3, 88 South. 438; Butterworth v. Cathcart, 168 Ala. 262, headnote 9, 52 South. 896; Wise v. Schneider, 205 Ala. 537, headnotes 2 and 3, 88 South. 662.

The court erred in giving the following charge, numbered 10, to the jury:

“The court charges the jury that, if they find from the evidence that the deceased did not have sufficient judgment, discretion, and intelligence to heed a warning signal if any had been given before moving the truck, then you cannot find for the plaintiff because the driver of the. truck failed to give a signal.”

This charge, like charge No. 3, ignores the tendency of the evidence and theory of the plaintiff thereon that the injury, was the result of two concurring or proximate causes, failure to give signal warning, and failure to look, after giving the signal, for persons in a perilous position before backing the truck.

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Related

Woodward Iron Co. v. Thompson
88 So. 438 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1921)
Wise v. Schneider
88 So. 662 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1921)
Georgia Pacific R. R. v. Blanton
84 Ala. 154 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1887)
Decatur Car Wheel & Manufacturing Co. v. Mehaffey
128 Ala. 242 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1900)
Birmingham Railway Light & Power Co. v. Wright
44 So. 1037 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1907)
Woodward Iron Co. v. Brown
52 So. 829 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1910)
Lutterworth & Lowe v. Cathcart
52 So. 896 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1910)
Randle v. Birmingham Railway, Light & Power Co.
53 So. 918 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 So. 593, 209 Ala. 550, 1923 Ala. LEXIS 515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scarpulla-v-giardina-ala-1923.