Renfroe v. Collins & Co.
Renfroe v. Collins & Co.
Addendum
On Rehearing.
Counsel for appellee insist that the consideration and decision of this court in Karpeles v. City Ice Delivery Co., 73 South. 642, 1 treating special charges J and M, is opposed to the present decision that charge A, quoted in the opinion ante, invaded the province of the jury, and to give it was error to reverse. The difference between those instructions and that involved on this appeal is radical and apparent. There the negligence hypothesized, viz. the excessive speed of the motorcycle which collided with defendant’s automobile, was a character of negligence that might, in the order of causation have intervened to have afforded the sole (exclusive) proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injury, thereby denying, by the hypothesis, the ascription of plaintiff’s injury, for proximate cause, to either the negligence or the willful or wanton misconduct or omission of defendant’s chauffeur. Here the alternative hypothesis in charge A is predicated of the violation of an ordinance which could not, in any possible event, have intervened to sever or to interrupt the order of causation which the jury may have found was put into motion through the wanton or willful acts of the driver of the defendant’s truck. It was open to the jury to find under the evidence in this record that, notwithstanding the boy violated the ordinance by holding onto the truck while rolling. on skates in a public thoroughfare, the driver of the truck willfully or wantonly so ordered its course and speed as to proximately cause the boy’s injury. Certainly it could not be correctly said in this or any other case that under such circumstances the violation of *493 the ordinance was or could he the sole, exclusive proximate cause of the injury thus suffered. The decision in the case of B. R., L. & P. Co. v. Ely, 183 Ala. 383, 62 South. 816, is without bearing upon the question presented through the giving of charge A. quoted in the opinion ante. It is not possible to interpret this charge as submitting to the jury the inquiry “whether or not the defendant was guilty of willfulness or wantonness proximately contributing to the death of deceased.” A reconsideration of the error pronounced upon the court’s action in instructing the jury, at defendant’s request, that deceased was a trespasser and guilty of a violation of the law in holding onto defendant’s truck while on roller skates, confirms this court’s opinion in that regard. This court did not feel authorized to ignore or disregard plain, pertinent testimony so as to avert the implication of error from an instruction that invaded the jury’s province to pass upon such evidence. The extract from the oral charge of the court in which the jury was advised that:
“All persons are forbidden to use the streets of the city for skating thereon. To do so is an unlawful act of trespass on the part of the person so guilty”
—was not justified by the evidence; and to so instruct the jury was manifest error.
The application for rehearing is hence denied.
Opinion of the Court
James Renfroe, a minor a few months under 12 years of age and a son of the plaintiff! (appellant) was killed as the immediate result of his head’s striking the paving of a public thoroughfare in the city of Birmingham. The hoy was on roller skates at the time. According to the plaintiff’s theory the boy was holding on, either to the side of the defendant’s (appellee’s) moving auto truck, or to the rear thereof, in order to be drawn along the paved way, on his skates, by the power of the truck. The complaint contained two counts; one ascribing the fatal injury to simple negligence, and the other attributing the fatal injury to wanton (not willful) misconduct or omission for which the defendant is responsible.^ Besides the general issue, the defendant in-' terposed special pleas 1, 2, 3, 4, and 6. The report of the appeal will reproduce these pleas. Plea 5 was stricken at plaintiff’s (appellant’s) instance. Pleas 2, 3, 4, and 6 were sustained as against the count charging simple negligence, but were eliminated as *491 asserting efficient defenses to the count charging the aggravated wrong set forth in the second count.
“Counsel for defendant here introduced in evidence section 22 of an ordinance of the city of Birmingham, being part of Ordinance 174C, entitled ‘Laws to further regulate the use of the public highway in the city of Birmingham.’ Plaintiff objected to the introduction of said ordinance on the ground that it was irrelevant, immaterial, illegal, and unreasonable and not binding in this case. It was here admitted by counsel for plaintiff to save the trouble and expense of having a witness brought up from the city hall to prove said ordinance, that the ordinance admitted was identical with the regular duly passed ordinance book, and in that way waived further proof. The court overruled the objection. Plaintiff then and there duly and legally excepted to the ruling of 1 the court.”
It is insisted that this was error because it was not shown that the ordinance was in force and effect at the time in question. The admission and waiver expressed in the quoted recital from the bill of exceptions precluded any subsequent complaint by appellant in the premises.
“All persons are forbidden to use the streets of the city for skating thereon. To do so is an unlawful act of trespass on the part of the person so guilty.”
There was, so far as we have discovered, no evidence to justify this statement. It was stated by one of the young companions of the plaintiff’s son that in certain parts of the city (down town, it seems) skating was not permitted. This statement was erroneous ; and this court is not able to affirm that the advice thereby given the jury had no *492 prejudicial effect. From it the jury would quite naturally conclude that plaintiff’s boy was violating the city’s laws when he went on the street, in- which he was killed, without regard to whether he caught hold of a moving truck or other vehicle or not.
“The court charges the jury that deceased was a trespasser and guilty of a violation of the law in holding on to defendant’s truck while on roller skates.”
In view of the evidence of the defendant’s witness Megerson, who testified that the hoy never did catch hold of the truck, this instruction invaded the province of the jury, and should not have been given. If, however, he did catch hold of this moving truck while he was on roller skates, he was a trespasser, and offended the ordinance set out in plea 4.
“The court charges the jury that if they find from the evidence that deceased was killed as a sole proximate consequence of his own negligence or as a sole proximate consequence of the violation of the city ordinance introduced in evidence, you cannot return a verdict in favor of plaintiff under either count of the complaint.”
Under the issues and the evidence this instruction was erroneously given. It was affirmatively faulty not merely calculated to mislead the jury. Its immediate effect was to conclude against a recovery under the wanton count upon an alternative hypothesis, predicated on the prohibition of the ordinance and its violation by plaintiff’s son, that could, under no circumstances, have justified the willful or wanton injury of the boy. There was evidence tending to show that the boy had hold of the side of the moving truck, between the front and rear wheels on that side; that the driver saw him there and knew he was rolling on his skates; that the driver, so advised, accelerated the speed of the truck and gave it a zigzag course; that, under these circumstances, he directed the truck over the surface of the street which was uneven or rough because of a railway, about the rails 1 of which a different and less smooth quality of paving was laid; and that when the wheels of the boy’s skates struck this less smooth surface of the street the boy was either immediately thrown to the pavement, or the rear wheel of the truck caught one of the skates fastened to his foot, broke the skate, and released it from his foot. In view of the tendencies of the evidence going to show that the truck wheel caught the skate attached to the boy’s foot, the conclusion is that the question whether the averments of the counts that the truck “ran upon, against, or over plaintiff’s said minor son” were sustained by the evidence was due to be submitted to the jury, and could not, without invading the jury’s province, be decided by the court. The trial court correctly defined the character of the action; it being brought under that feature of the Homicide Act authorizing the parent to sue for the death of the child (Code, § 2485); and the recovery and its measure is punitive only.
Reversed and remanded.
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