135 Ala. 154 | Ala. | 1902
The testimony of the plaintiff alone tends to show that the car was stationary when he attempted to alight from it, and that when he was in the act of alighting it; was pnt in motion with a. jerk Avhich threw him to the ground and inflicted the injuries of which he complains. Four wholly disinterested witnesses testify that the car was in rapid motion, going from eight to twelve miles an hour, when the plaintiff attempted to alight, and that it was this motion of Hie car, well known to him, of course, which caused his fall and injuries. Their testimony is corroborated by undisputed evidence as to other circumstances of tire occurrence— the location of the accident a.t a place where it was not customary or proper for cars to stop, the juxtaposition of plaintiff’s boarding house, the extreme violence of the fall, he being turned topsy turvy thereby and alighting on his head so that his attitude when he struck the ground was much that of a man standing on his head, a thing, we take it, much more, likely to occur when a man unaccustomed to the feat attempts to get off a rapidly moving car- than when he; falls in consequence of a stationary car being put in motion when he is in the act of alighting, etc., etc., — and the plaintiff’s testimony is wholly lacking in corroboration of any sort. This state of the case shows so clearly to our minds that the preponderance of the. evidence ivas so greatly against the verdict for the plaintiff — so clearly establishes both the absence of negligence on the part of the defendant, and the want of due care on the part of the plaintiff— thait we feel justified in affirming, the presumption of
Reversed, rendered in part and remanded.