Affirming.
The Chesapeake Ohio Railway Company has appealed from a $1,000 judgment for personal injuries recovered against it by Mrs. Smith, who charged and testified she had taken passage at Bays Branch, on December 30, 1930, on a train of the defendant, expecting to go to her home on the left fork of Beaver Creek. At Allen in Floyd county it was necessary for her to change trains. When the train stopped at Allen, Mrs. Smith claims she and her three children, as well as other passengers, *Page 822 were leaving the train they were on, for the purpose of boarding another of the defendant's trains that would carry her to her destination. As she was descending the steps of the car, it was given, so she says, a terrific jerk backwards, by which she was thrown therefrom and sustained an injury to one of her legs as well as internal injuries from which she was caused to suffer and still suffers.
The defendant denied everything, even denying plaintiff was a passenger, and pleaded her contributory negligence, as the sole cause of her injuries, if she received any.
The plaintiff introduced Mollie Yonce, who supported plaintiff and testified she was at the station at Allen for the purpose of boarding a train for her home, which is at Burton, and that she saw Mrs. Smith on the steps of the car, saw the fear move, and saw Mrs. Smith fall. These were the only witnesses to the alleged accident. The testimony of the witnesses for the defendant make it appear that Mrs. Smith's alleged fall is highly improbable, but it was for the jury to say which witnesses told the truth.
"At the time the defendant, its agents, servants and employees gave the engine thereof such a sudden, violent, unusual and unnecessary jerk that caused plaintiff to fall, she and a number of other passengers were alighting from said train."
That is just another way of saying the defendant moved this train before she and other passengers had had a reasonable time to alight.
Judgment affirmed.
