Court Opinion

ID: 3234130
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:09:05.477517+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:40:20.055580
License: Public Domain

Section 4635, Code 1907, provides for struck juries as follows:
"In all actions triable by jury, either party may demand a struck jury, and must thereupon be furnished by the sheriff with a list of twenty-four jurors in attendance upon the court, from which a jury must be obtained by the parties or their attorneys alternately striking one from the list until twelve are stricken off, the party demanding the jury commencing; and the jury thus obtained must not be challenged for any cause, except bias or interest as to the particular case."
The Jury Law of 1909 (Acts 1909, § 32, p. 318) preserves this right and procedure in civil cases.
The bill of exceptions shows that the mandate of the statute was violated, in that all the jurors in attendance for the week, 28, were presented as the special panel from which the parties were required to select a jury by alternate striking. By a plausible refinement of reasoning it might be contended that the error of excess in the number of the panel was not prejudicial to either party, since, after the first 2 jurors were stricken by each party, they thereafter proceeded regularly from the basis of 24, as provided by the statute.
In dealing with such rights as this, however, we are not permitted to speculate upon the possible or probable consequences of a violation of the law. To do so for the purpose of upholding the judgment rendered would be, in effect, to sanction the repeal of any provision of the statute by trial judges at their mere discretion, and might render the exercise of the right a dangerous snare instead of a valuable privilege. Nor does it matter that the party complaining of the error is not the party who demanded the struck jury; for, when the demand is made by either, each party has an equal right to procedure according to the law.
"The rule as to errors and irregularities is more strict in the case of special or struck juries than in the case of ordinary juries. The established mode of procedure must be strictly followed, and the court cannot by any rule or practice vary the express provisions of the statute as to how the jury shall be selected." 24 Cyc. 258, 4.
In order that the practice prescribed by the Legislature may be preserved, we deem it necessary that the judgment in this case be reversed for the erroneous practice here shown.
Plea 6 is manifestly bad. The only negligence specified is that plaintiff "holloed" at the mule he was driving loose in the mine, thereby causing the mule to turn near the prop and knock it down. According to Worcester's Dictionary, "hollo" is defined simply as a word used in calling. Certainly it does not import an address so rude as might be expected to shock the sensibilities of a mule, and so to drive him to disordered and dangerous action. We are bound to know, as a matter of common knowledge, that beasts of burden are governed and directed by the voice of their drivers even more than by bits and reins. The plea does not show that plaintiff gave the wrong direction to the mule, following which the catastrophe resulted, and hence there is nothing to support an inference of negligence.
Plea 13 is the same as plea 6, with the additional averment that plaintiff knew the mule to be "vicious, unruly, or untrained." The qualities alleged are in the alternative. The mere fact that plaintiff knew the mule was "vicious" — whatever that mulish quality may import — has no tendency to show that plaintiff's attempt to command him by speech was unadvised, or improper, or in *Page 40 
any way negligent. And assuming, as we may, that plaintiff's "hollo" was a command to the mule to do the right thing, in terms supposed to be intelligible to his mulish understanding, his disobedience to orders cannot be translated into negligence on the part of his driver.
We think the demurrers to these pleas were properly sustained.
If the demurrer to plea 7 was improperly sustained, which we do not decide, the error was harmless, since its defensive scope was fully covered by plea 5, which went to the jury.
One of the issues in the case, as presented by one or more of defendant's special pleas, was whether plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in driving his mule on this occasion without the aid of reins. He was allowed to testify that he had so driven him on former occasions, and to show that it was the custom to do so in this mine and in other well-regulated mines.
The rule here applicable was stated in Warden v. L.  N. R. R. Co., 94 Ala. 277, 285, 10 So. 276, 280 (14 L.R.A. 552), as follows:
"Custom and usage may be relied upon to excuse the violation of a rule when the act involved is not negligent in itself, but only by relation to the rule violated; and so, when an act may be done in two or more ways, a resort to neither of which involves such obvious peril as raises the legal presumption or conclusion of negligence in the doing of it, a custom or usage to do it in a particular way may be looked to, as tending to show that it was not negligence to resort to that method in the instance under consideration. But custom can in no case impart the qualities of due care and prudence to an act which involves obvious peril, which is voluntarily and unnecessarily done
[italics supplied], and which the law itself declares to be negligent."
Driving this mule without reins in this mine cannot be said to have been obviously dangerous; nor can it be said to have been voluntarily and unnecessarily practiced by plaintiff, in view of the undisputed evidence that the animal was delivered to him by defendant without the equipment of reins, which was in effect a command to drive without them. We think the testimony complained of was properly admitted.
Charge 2, given for plaintiff, does not assume that defendant's bank boss was negligent in fact, and was properly given.
As we read the evidence, it has no tendency to show that plaintiff was guilty of any negligence in his manner of driving the mule. On the contrary, it shows very plainly and conclusively that the prop was knocked down by the sudden and willful action of the mule in turning in the wrong direction. Hence all those charges requested by defendant on that theory of the case, as presented by special pleas, were properly refused.
A number of charges refused to defendant were postulated on pleas which charged that plaintiff negligently went under the rock, knowing it was dangerous to do so, or knowing that the prop had been knocked out. These charges are faulty in predicating the result upon plaintiff's negligently going under the rock, etc., without any definition of what would constitute negligence in that regard, and were therefore properly refused. Ala. Cons. Co. v. Heald, 168 Ala. 648, 53 So. 162.
Several charges were refused to defendant which in effect asserted that the act of the mule in knocking down the prop was the efficient cause of plaintiff's injury, and not the defendant's manner of propping it.
If the jury should have found that the rock was so loosely propped that a chance blow such as this could knock down the prop, and that such a mischance might reasonably be expected to happen in the ordinary course of mining operations, then they could find that defendant was guilty of negligence, and that that negligence was the efficient proximate cause of plaintiff's injury, even though the event was immediately produced by the accidental contact of the mule. In short, the act of the mule may be considered as a co-operating cause, and not necessarily an independent self-operating cause which excluded defendant's negligence as a proximate causative agency. This was at least a question for the jury in this case.
For the error noted, let the judgment be reversed, and the cause remanded for another trial.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and MAYFIELD and THOMAS, JJ., concur.
                              On Rehearing.