Court Opinion

ID: 7367088
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-27 23:52:43.18991+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:20:47.946495
License: Public Domain

McCLELLAN, J.
Action for damages by appellee against appellant, alleged to have resulted to plaintiff’s property in consequence of fire emitted by a locomotive in use on defendant’s railway. Responding to a suggestion in brief for appellee, we may say that the errors are assigned on the transcript, and that no joinder therein appears.
There was no occasion to employ ten counts to state the simple matter upon which plaintiff relied for the establishment of defendant’s liability for the damages claimed to have been suffered. One count, properly phrased, would have sufficed. In this class of cases a general averment of negligence in the operation, construction, or equipment of a locomotive then in use on the defendant’s railroad, whereby the damage alleged is proximately caused, meets all the conditions of good pleading, in this state, in such cases. — L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Smith, 163 Ala. 141, 50 South 241, among others. All of the counts are in case. Each one of the counts to which appellant contends its demurrer should have been sustained has been carefully examined. While the counts may be said to contain much that was unnecessary to be averred, none were subject to the grounds of demurrer interposed.
*615The general affirmative charge on the whole case was requested by and refused to defendant. Under the evidence in this record, that was the proper disposition to make of the charge.
There was evidence tending to show the putting out of the fire by sparks from a locomotive in use on defendant’s railroad, and of its progression to plaintiff’s property. If the jury accepted the view that the fire was caused by defendant’s locomotive, “the burden then passed to the defendant to show, at least prima facie, that the fire so communicated was emitted without negligence in the construction, equipment, and operation of the locomotive in question.” — Sullivan Timber Co. v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 163 Ala. 125, 132, 50 South. 941, 943. “If the evidence offered by defendant in negation of such negligence prima facie overcame the presumption that the communication of the fire, as stated, was the result of negligence — a question for the court, as was ruled in Reese’s Case, 85 Ala. 497 [5 South. 283, 7 Am. St. Rep. 66]— * * * then the obligation was on the plaintiff, before he could recover, to adduce some affirmative evidence tending to show negligence in construction, equipment, or operation of the locomotive.” — Sullivan Co. v. L. & N. R. R. Co., supra.
A careful review of this entire evidence does not convince this court, as it did not the court below, that the evidence presented by the defendant overcame prima facie the presumption stated. At best the witnesses, on the subject of the proper construction and equipment of engine numbered 30, were far from affirming the facts essential to make the rebutting (of the stated presumption) the prima facie case required to put the plaintiff to proof of particular negligence.
There was manifest error in the substance of this statement by the court in the presence of the jury, a *616conclusion of law which the court enforced in its rulings on the evidence: “I shall charge the jury that it is the duty of railroads to use the most modern appliances to prevent accidents from sparks.” The accepted-measure of duty in this regard was long since stated ih. Reese’s Case, 85 Ala. 502, 5 South. 283, 7 Am. St. Rep. 66, and has been often reiterated here. This duty is. fulfilled, in respect of equipment, “by adopting such appliances and contrivances as are in practical use by well-regulated railroad companies, and which have been proved by experience to be adapted to the purpose.” The view the trial court had and enforced in its rulings established too high a standard in the premises. The adoption of the “most modern appliances” would entail án obligation very greatly higher than the standard this court has so long approved.
The rule as respects the right of amendment and of the inapplication of the statute of limitations, where the same transaction is the basis of the counts added, has been finally approved and set down in Ala. Consolidated Coal Co. v. Heald, 154 Ala. 580, 45 South. 686; Code, § 5367. There should be no further difficulty in respect of such matters. The amendments made in this instance were properly allowed under the rule of that authority.
For the error indicated, the judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
Anderson, C. J., and Sayre and Somerville, JJ., concur.