Nashville, C. & St. L. Ry. v. Myrick
Nashville, C. & St. L. Ry. v. Myrick
Opinion of the Court
This is an action for damages for the killing of a mule and injuries to a wagon owned by the plaintiff, and alleged to have been proximatqly caused either by the negligence of the defendant or its servants, or wantonness on the part of the servants in running a train against the wagon and te.am while it was crossing the defendant’s tracks at a public road crossing.
The evidence shows that only one of the mules, the one working on the right-hand side, was killed, and that the wheels of the wagon on the right-hand side were broken off and the wagon otherwise injured. The evidence shows that the passenger train that collided with the wagon and team was leaving the station at Huntsville, and was going north approaching the crossing around a curve, the crossing being just outside the corporate limits. The team was approaching the crossing from the west along a road that leads from the Pulaski pike into Church street, and crosses the defendant’s track, as the evidence tends to show, from 50 to 150 yards east of the fiber factory located on the public road.
At a point about two-thirds of the distance between the railroad crossing and the fiber factory on the public road is located a bridge which was crossed by the plaintiff’s team, and the evidence shows that the crossing was slightly elevated above its surroundings. The collision between the train and the team occurred just before or about dawn on the 5th of January, 1915. The evidence tended to show that the rays of the headlight of the engine as it approached the crossing around the curve played along the public road over the space between the fiber factory and the crossing, and the plaintiff’s witness Blair testified that the rays of the headlight flashed upon the wagon and team when it was at or near the bridge. While this witness further testified that the mules were standing at this time, there is other evidence showing that the mules became frightenéd just about the time they passed, from behind the fiber factory, that the driver Sharp lost control over them, that they, were “running away,” and that he could not have stopped them if he had known of the approach of the train. There was evidence offered by the plaintiff tending to show that the statutory signals were not given.
The evidence offered by the defendant showed that the enginemen were keeping a lookout ahead, within, the range of the headlight, that they,did not discover the team approaching the crossing, and that they had no knowledge of its approach until the team ran into the train, the tongue of the wagon striking the tender of the locomotive; that no effort to use the appliances to check the speed or stop the train was made until after the collision. There was also evidence that the statutory signals were given as the train approached the crossing.
“Unless the evidence bearing upon the question whether the defendant’s negligence was the proximate cause of the injury complained of is entirely free from doubt or adverse influence, that question must be submitted to the jury for decision, under proper instructions by the court.” Briggs v. B. R., L. & P. Co., 188 Ala. 262, 66 South. 95.
These conclusions justify the action of the court in refusing the several affirmative charges requested by the defendant.
Sharp, the driver in charge of plaintiff’s team, testified in respect to the collision:
“I came from Mr. Myrick’s house and was carrying a trunk to the Southern depot in a covered milk wagon with sides to it, and was driving two mules traveling on the road which leads from the Pulaski pike by tahe brickyard and the fiber factory and comes into Church street. The mules ran away with me, and I reckon the train must have run over the one that was hurt. I could not hold them. They ran upon the railroad track, and the train hit them. I didn’t hear the train coming and didn’t see the headlight, no whistle was blown, and no bell rung. I was housed up. The mules started to run about even with the fiber factory and ran over a little bridge between that and the railroad track. The train knocked the mules around and tore the wagon all to pieces, and one mule fell dead after going a few steps. * * * The front part of the engine hit the right-hand mule and struck the wagon. '* * * I didn’t see the train until it hit the mides. The front of my wagon was open and didn’t have any glass in it. The train knocked both mules down and turned over the wagon, and I came Out under the mules. Half of the wagon wheels were broken off — the wheels on the right of the wagon. It must have been the front part of the engine that struck the wagon. I didn’t see what part struck. I didn’t see the headlight. The first I knew of it was when it knocked the mules around.”
The plaintiff also offered some evidence of one or more witnesses that:
“Erom appearances there [on the tracks], two wheels of the wagon had gotten- on the railings and on the wood to which the rails of the railroad track were fastened just inside the rails.”
It was shown that the force of the collision threw the team and the wagon into the ditch on the north side of the public road and on the west side of the railroad. Only one of the mules was injured. It is more than probable that if the mules had gone onto the tracks so that the front wheels ofr the wagon were on the inside of the rails, that the force of the collision would have thrown the mules on the east side of the track, and not only one, but both, would have been injured.
For this error, the judgment must be reversed.
Reversed and remanded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.