Court Opinion

ID: 6521506
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 19:03:54.637056+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:55:09.624973
License: Public Domain

THOMAS, J.
The appellant brought this suit against the appellee for the alleged negligence of the latter’s agents, servants, or employees in the operation of a locomotive engine or train over a line of railroad tracks owned or controlled by appellee, Avhereby one mule, the property of appellant, was killed or disabled. The case was tried on the plea of the general issue. The defendant, appellee here, offered no eAddence, but upon the conclusion of that offered by appellant requested the general affirmative charge in writing, which was given by the court; Avhereupon there was verdict and judgment accordingly. We are asked to review the action of the court in granting this charge.
The evidence as to how the mule came to its death was entirely circumstantial. It tended to show that on the 3d day of May, 1910, the mule was first discovered in its injured condition at a place about 400 or 500 yards from the railroad tracks of the defendant company, Avhere it was found lying doAvn with one of its forelegs broken near the knee joint, the broken bone protruding from the flesh, Avith a skinned place, bruised and swollen, on the side of its head, and other skinned and bruised places on the fore and hind legs and flanks; that the mule Avas tracked back to the roadbed of the defendant company, distance some 400 or 500 yards, as said; that along these tracks of the mule there were some blood signs, and occasionally some holes in the ground, as if made by the protruding bone of the broken *463leg, and indications at different places where it appeared the mule had lain down; that on the railroad to where the tracks of the mule led back there was a small trestle, some 4 or 5 feet high, and that on this trestle there were blood stains and some hair of the color of that of the mule scattered over several of the cross-ties, and likewise some under the trestle; that from the trestle the mule was tracked back along defendant’s said roadbed a distance of 100 or 150 yards to where it appeared to have come on from an old field. It appeared, on cross-examination of one of plaintiff’s witnesses, that defendant used said railroad as a logging road, and operated locomotives over it for the purpose of hauling timber from the forest to its lumber manufacturing plant at Manchester. There was also proof of the amount of plaintiff’s damages.
The foregoing circumstances, while affording no reasonable inference of negligence on the part of defendant company in the injuring or disabling of said mule, yet are sufficient, if believed by the jury, to warrant an inference that the mule came upon the track and was injured by one of defendant’s locomotives at or near said trestle, though the circumstances detailed might also be susceptible of explanation on other hypotheses.
It being true that the circumstances in evidence, by fair and reasonable, though not exclusive, deduction, point to the killing or injuring of the mule on defendant’s tracks by one of its locomotives or cars, the plaintiff made out a prima facie case, and the court erred in giving the general affirmative charge for the defendant, provided section 5476 of the Code, imposing on railroad companies the burden of acquitting themselves of negligence when stock is injured or killed by their locomotives and cars, is applicable to the defendant company. *464■ — III. Gen. R’. Go. v. Bottoms, 1 Ala. App. 302, 55 South. 60. The defendant, as before stated, offered no proof whatever to rebut this presumption of negligence, provided the statute mentioned applies, nor did the evidence of the plaintiff, which tended to prove the injury to the mule, do so; but the defendant’s counsel, in their brief, seek to justify the aetion of the trial court, in giving the general charge in its favor, solely upon the ground that the statute referred to has no application to the defendant company, for the reason that it is not a railroad company, but is, as its name would indicate, a lumber company, and operates small engines, weighing, as the evidence shows, some 25 or 30 tons, and propelled by steam, over its railroad tracks, which are mere logging roads, as an incident and auxiliary to its chief business, and for the purpose of transporting timber from the woods to its manufacturing plant. No authority is cited in brief sustaining the view that such a railroad is not within the purview of the statute, and we have been unable to find any. We do find, however, that the question of the applicability of the statute to street railroads has been before this court, and before, we may add incidentally, the writer was a member thereof; and this court held that it was applicable to street railroads. — Selma, St. & Surburban Ry. Go. v. Martin, 2 Ala. App. 542, 56 South. 601.
The last-cited case was decided by this court on November 30, 1911, and was subsequently certioraried to the Supreme Court, which reversed it on May 30, 1912 (see Ex parte Selma St. & Surburban Ry. Co. [Sup.] 59 South. 169), to make it conform to the opinion of that court handed down on May 14, 1912, in the case of Appel v. Selma St. & Surburban Ry. Co. (Sup.) 59 South. 164, where they held that the statute was not applicable to street railways.
*465We have examined the latter case very carefully, with the view of making our rulings in the present case conform to that; but we do not find that the decision in that case, holding the statute not applicable to street railroads, is such as to preclude us from holding that the statute is applicable to logging railroads. In that case it is held, in effect, among other things, that, if the three preceding sections (5473, 5474, and 5475) all applied to street railroads, then section 5476 would apply to them, otherwise not; and that, since only one of the three preceding sections, to wit, section 5473, applied to street railroads, section 5476 did not do so.
While fully appreciating our duty to malee our decisions conform to those of the Supreme, Court, and while earnestly desiring to do so, being well aware that such is essential to the uniformity of decisions and the certainty of law, among the very greatest of desiderata, yet we do not construe this duty to require that, where that court has not expressly ruled on a question, we should be bound to reach such a conclusion on that question, when presented to us, as to exclude the possibility of the conclusion we, reach conflicting with its reasoning only on a kindred, though not the identical, question.
The Supreme Court has decided, as said, employing one line of reasoning, that section 5476 is not applicable to a street railroad; while we are of opinion, employing another line of reasoning, that it is applicable to a logging railroad. Whether we could reach our conclusion in the logging railroad case on the same line of reasoning employed by them in the street railroad case, we do not know; and we are loath to attempt it, because it would entail upon us the necessity of determining whether or not sections 5473, 5474 and 5475, the three preceding sections, were also applicable to logging roads — ques*466tions not presented or hinted at, even remotely, by the record in this case, and involving additional and some different rights from the one here presented, and to a proper determination of which we would like fuller evidence as to further distinguishing features between logging railroads and general commercial railroads in particulars which might be material in deciding those questions. Hence we do not decide whether said sections 5473, 5474, and 5475 are applicable to logging railroads or not, though upon a casual consideration it would appear that they are.
However, neither this court nor the Supreme Court has ever held that any one of said three sections is not applicable to a logging road; and until this is done we are, when holding that section 5476 — the one under consideration — is applicable to logging railroads, saved from an implication that, in so doing, we are reaching a conclusion that cannot be sustained by the reasoning of the Supreme Court when it held that section 5476 was not applicable to street railroads because the three preceding sections were not. This being true, we cannot escape the duty of dealing in our own way with the question of the applicability of section 5476 to logging railroads — a question with which that court has not dealt.
Said section reads as follows: “A railroad company is liable for all damages done to persons, or to stock or other property, resulting from a failure to comply with the requirements of the three preceding sections, or any negligence on the part of such company or its agents, and when any person or stock is lolled or injured, or other property destroyed or damaged, by the locomotive or cars of any railroad, the burden of proof, in any suit brought therefor, is on the railroad company to shoio a compliance with the requirements of such sections, and *467that there toas no negligence on the part of the company or its agents
There is, of course, in some particulars, a wide difference, as contended by appellee’s counsel, between logging railroads, on the one hand, and general, or commercial, railroads, to whom the statute is confessedly applicable, on the other; notably, in the purposes for which they are operated — one is a private road used for the convenience and accommodation of lumbermen; while the other is a common carrier, and for the use of the universal public in the transportation of persons, baggage, and freight.
However, both have one thing in common, and that is a railroad track; and both operate over it cars or locomotives propelled by some motor power, like steam, electricity, or gasoline; and when so propelled, though useful indeed, have yet proved to be dangerous instrumentalities, even when carefully operated, frequently running over and killing or injuring persons and stock, and that often at times and places where there are not witnesses to the accident save the crew, or a portion of it, that is operating the locomotive.
The three sections (5473, 5474, and 5475) next preceding' the one under consideration were evidently grounded in a legislative aim to protect life and property against the negligence of those employing such dan.gerous instrumentalities by requiring that class of them operating under conditions which bring them within the terms and spirit of those sections, respectively, to take certain precautions looking to public safety therein prescribed; while the section under consideration (5476) is, we think, intended, not only to impose a liability upon that class to whom either or all of the three preceding sections is applicable, for a failure to comply with the section as applicablé, when there has been re*468.sultant injury, and to afford a rebutable presumption that they have not complied, but goes further, and in the concluding portions, we think imposes on all classes, whether operating or not under conditions which bring them within the purview of either of the preceding sections, a liability for “any negligence” on their part, and furnishes a means of proof of such negligence, which, ■as said, quite often lies exclusively within the breast of the wrongdoer himself, by presuming its existence until rebutted by proof to the contrary.
The case in hand presents a concrete illustration and justification of the wisdom of the statute in the latter particular. Here the plaintiff has a mule injured or ■disabled under such circumstances as to warrant a reasonable inference that it was done by the train of cars of defendant. Was it negligently done? Even if it was, the plaintiff, but for the aid of the statute, likely fails, because, as we infer from the record, nobody saw it, ■except the defendant’s agent or agents operating the train, who are opposed to plaintinff in interest, and yet he cannot make them his witnesses without vouching for their veracity. If there was no negligence, the defendant is in better position to prove it than the. plaintiff is to prove negligence, in event there was any; hence the wisdom of the statute. The first portion of section ■5476, reading as follows, “A railroad company is liable for all damage done to persons, or to stock or other property, resulting from a failure to comply with the requirements of the three preceding sections,” we think, ■clearly means, also, what we would, after the last word quoted, add by construction, “or a failure to comply with the requirements of either of such sections,” and has reference, we think, not only to persons and corporations operating a railroad under conditions which make ■all the three preceding sections applicable to them, but *469also to those operating under conditions which make either of the preceding sections applicable to them; while the remaining portion of said section 5476, reading as follows, “and when any person or stock is killed or injured, * * by the locomotive or cars of any railroad, the burden of proof, in any snit brought therefor,, is on the railroad company to show a compliance with such sections [(so applicable to it, if any/ we would insert by construction], and that there was no negligence on the part of the company, or its agents,” we think, has reference, not only to all persons and corporations operating railroads under such conditions that all the three preceding sections would apply to them, not only to all such as operate them under such conditions as that only one of the preceding sections would be applicable to them, but also to those to whom they would become applicable if the railroad should ever be operated under such conditions as to bring them within the purview of either of said three preceding sections. All of the three classes mentioned must prove, we think, under the requirements of section 5476, “that there toas no negligence on the part of the company or its agentsand the class to whom only one of the three preceding sections is applicable must go further and prove a compliance with the requirements of that particular section; and that class to whom all the three preceding sections are applicable must go still further and prove a compliance with all of said sections; but the class to whom none of said three preceding sections have become applicable would only be required to prove “that there was no negligence on its part or that of its agents.”
The last portion of section 5476 is, we think, broad and comprehensive, and designed to reach all persons and corporations who operate a railroad, whether chiefly or only incidentally, whether as a common carrier *470or only for private convenience. It concerns itself -with the instrumentality employed — proved by experience to be dangerous — and not with the character of business carried on by means of that instrumentality.' Hence we think the section is applicable to logging railroads; and that therefore the loiver court erred in giving the defendant the general affirmative charge.
The court did not err in refusing, upon objection of defendant, to permit plaintiff to ask the latter’s witness Fountain if he did not uoav Avork for the defendant company. It Avas clearly but an attempt on the part of plaintiff either to discredit his oavu witness, when plaintiff is not shoAvn to have been entrapped into putting him on the stand, or to add credit to his own witness, Avhen defendant had not in any way impeached him or attempted to do so.
We find no merit in the other assignments of error, and, as the questions presented would not likely arise on another trial, we will not discuss them.
For the error in giving the general charge for defendant, the cause is reversed.
Reversed and remanded.