DocketNumber: 6 Div. 207.
Citation Numbers: 123 So. 215, 219 Ala. 692
Judges: Brown, Anderson, Sayre, Gardner, Thomas, Bouldin, Foster
Filed Date: 6/6/1929
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This is an action on the case by the appellee against the appellant for damage to the plaintiff's automobile, and for personal injuries suffered by the plaintiff in a collision between the plaintiff's automobile and the defendant's truck on a public highway.
Some of the counts of the complaint ascribe the plaintiff's injury and damage to the negligence of the defendant's servant or agent, while acting in the line and scope of his employment in the operation of the defendant's truck, in negligently causing or allowing the truck to collide with the plaintiff's automobile, and others ascribe the injury and damage to the wanton conduct of said agent or servant. The defendant's pleas, which were allowed to go to the jury, were the general issue to all counts, and contributory negligence as a defense to the negligence count.
The evidence shows, without dispute, that the plaintiff, who was driving a Ford automobile, was on his way home from Carbon Hill, going in the direction of Eldridge, and that defendant's truck, being driven by Voight, was proceeding in the opposite direction, *Page 694 when the two came in collision, damaging the plaintiff's car and the truck. As a result of the impact, plaintiff was thrown from his car and suffered personal injuries.
The collision occurred after dark, near 8 o'clock p. m. on July 27, 1927, on a straight stretch of the road which was broad enough to allow three cars to pass, and the evidence offered by the plaintiff tends to show that the truck was being driven without lights, at from 20 to 30 miles per hour; that immediately before the collision the truck turned to the left of the center of the highway, crossing over a ridge of gravel made by the road drag, striking the left wheel and fender of plaintiff's car, which, according to the evidence of plaintiff and his witnesses, was moving along the highway to the right of said ridge with its lights burning.
The defendant offered evidence which tends to show that plaintiff's car was moving down grade, taking a serpentine course in or near the center of the highway, with but one dim headlight, and immediately before the collision turned to the left into the truck; that the plaintiff, who was driving the automobile, was under the influence of liquor. The evidence was in sharp conflict as to the position of the truck and the automobile immediately after the collision. One phase of the evidence tended to show that they were standing apart sufficiently for another car to pass between them, and another phase was to the effect that they were hitched together and had to be moved before other cars were allowed to pass.
At the time of the collision one Bolin was riding in the plaintiff's car, and testified as a witness for plaintiff, giving a full and detailed account of what occurred immediately preceding the impact, and on cross-examination defendant was allowed to show that this witness had been drinking during the afternoon, and during the course of his cross-examination the witness testified: "The deputy sheriff did not arrest me up there just about night. Dick Burrows did not arrest me and give me a bond to make, and nobody else arrested me there for being drunk." During the presentation of its evidence, the defendant offered Burrows as a witness, who testified: "I had seen Bob Bolin out from Carbon Hill apiece, late that afternoon." Thereupon defendant's counsel asked the witness: "Had you arrested him that afternoon, and given him a bond to make?" While it was permissible for the defendant to show that Bolin was under the influence of liquor at the time of the collision, and before, as affecting the credibility of his testimony, yet whether or not he was arrested for being drunk was wholly immaterial, and shed no light on the issues or the credibility of the testimony. Rector v. State,
Charge 31, requested by and refused to the defendant, ignores the tendencies of the evidence that as a result of the impact the cars bounced apart, and were not, immediately after the collision, on the same spot they were when they collided, and other tendencies that the cars were moved soon after the collision. It is also faulty in singling out and giving undue prominence to a single part of the evidence, and was refused without error. Postal Tel. Cable Co. v. Jones,
The defendant's ninth plea avers: "At the time of the accident complained of in the complaint a truck of this defendant was being driven along the public highway in Walker county, Alabama, between Eldridge, in said county, and Carbon Hill, and on said date the plaintiff was driving plaintiff's car in an opposite direction along the same highway, and the plaintiff negligently drove his said car upon or against the said truck of this defendant, and knocked one of the wheels of defendant's truck out of line, and bent and broke the front end of said truck, and the left side thereof, and broke the windshield of said truck, and otherwise injured and damaged said truck of defendant to the extent of $500. Defendant claims of the said plaintiff the sum of $500 as damages to defendant's said truck, because of said negligence of the plaintiff, and defendant claims judgment in recoupment against the plaintiff in this case for said sum of $500 damage so done to its said truck." The court sustained the plaintiff's demurrer to this plea, and this ruling is made the basis of one of the assignments of error.
A plea of recoupment, which advances a counterclaim and seeks judgment over, must set forth the defendant's claim with the same certainty in averment as is required in stating a cause of action in a complaint. Berlin Machine Works v. Ewart Lumber Co.,
One of the appellee's contentions is that the averments of the plea show no causal connection between the negligence averred and the injury, and is lacking in averments showing that the injury was proximately caused by the alleged negligence. The averment of the plea in this respect is that "the plaintiff negligently drove his said car upon or against the said truck of this defendant and knocked one of the wheels of defendant's truck out of line," etc. These averments clearly show causal connection between the negligence and the injury, and that the injury to the truck was proximately caused by the plaintiff's negligence. Though the plea does not aver, in terms, that the injury to the truck was proximately caused by the plaintiff's negligence, such averment is unnecessary where affirmative action is alleged, and the averment shows with certainty to a common intent, that the act alleged is the direct *Page 695
and immediate cause of the injury. B. R., L. P. Co. v. Fisher,
Another contention of appellee is that it is not permissible to plead damages proximately resulting from the plaintiff's negligence to the defendant, where, as here, the complaint ascribes the plaintiff's injury and damage to the wanton conduct of the defendant, and in support of this contention Alabama Power Co. v. Armour Co.,
A plea of set-off is purely statutory, and under the rules of law then prevailing, now changed by statute (Code of 1923, § 10180) was a plea of confession and avoidance, while a plea of recoupment rested upon the principles of the common law, and does not confess the plaintiff's cause of action. Merchants' Bank v. Acme Lumber Mfg. Co.,
A plea of contributory negligence, as the terminology implies, like a plea of set-off, is one in confession and avoidance of the plaintiff's cause of action. McCarthy
Baldwin v. L. N. R. Co.,
This plea, as we have shown, not being a plea in confession and avoidance of the plaintiff's case, is predicated on actionable negligence, and not on defensive contributory negligence, and the fact that the complaint charges wantonness, not confessed by the plea of recoupment, can have no influence in determining the sufficiency of the plea. In the recent case of Brown v. Patterson,
The principle was early recognized as a doctrine of the common law, and it has been repeatedly held that the fact that the plaintiff sues in tort is no reason why a plea of recoupment should not be allowed, so as to settle and adjust the whole litigation arising out of the same matter in one suit. 24 R. C. L. 814, § 20; Carey v. Guillow,
In Heigle v. Willis, 50 Hun (N.Y.) 588, 3 N.Y. S. 497, the doctrine was applied in an action of tort predicated on a collision of the vehicles of the plaintiff and defendant on a highway. See, also, Hackney v. Fetsch,
The nature and sufficiency of the plea must be adjudged by the substance of its averments, and not by its address, and notwithstanding it is addressed "to the complaint and each count thereof," if that be ground for criticism, it is nevertheless a plea of recoupment, asserting a counterclaim to that pleaded by the plaintiff. *Page 696
However, inasmuch as the issues, submitted to the jury, under the plea of contributory negligence, some of which charged that "said plaintiff negligently drove the said car upon or against this defendant's truck," involved the inquiry as to whether or not the plaintiff was guilty of negligence in the same respect as charged in the plea of recoupment as proximately contributing to his injury, the verdict in his favor necessarily determined that he was not guilty of negligence in this respect. The ruling on the demurrer to plea 9 was therefore error without injury.
The record being free from reversible error, the judgment will be affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SAYRE, J., are of opinion that the demurrers to plea 9 were properly sustained. As to other matters they agree with the opinion.
GARDNER, J., is of opinion that it is unnecessary to pass on the question presented by plea 9; otherwise, he concurs in the foregoing opinion.
THOMAS and BOULDIN, JJ., concur in the opinion, except as indicated by the concurring opinion of Bouldin, J.
FOSTER, J., not sitting.
Bates v. Rentz , 262 Ala. 681 ( 1955 )
ROMAR DEV. v. Gulf View Management Corp. , 644 So. 2d 462 ( 1994 )
Norton v. Bumpus , 221 Ala. 167 ( 1930 )
Tyler v. Drennen , 255 Ala. 377 ( 1951 )
Foreman v. Dorsey Trailers, Inc. , 256 Ala. 253 ( 1951 )
Scroggins v. Alabama Gas Corporation , 275 Ala. 650 ( 1963 )