66 So. 633 | Ala. | 1914
Appellant, hereafter to be referred to as the plaintiff, alleged in his complaint that when injured he was upon defendant’s right of way and track for the purpose of loading some lumber on a car for transportation. Considering the purpose for which plaintiff was at the place where he received his injury, presumptively on defendant’s express or implied invitation, he was not a trespasser, nor was he a bare licensee, and defendant was bound to exercise reasonable care in respect to the condition of the place, as in other respects, to avoid injuring him while so engaged. Count 3, to which an apt demurrer was sustained, would have made defandant a practical insurer of plaintiff’s safety, and so would have put an undue burden upon the former. The demurrer to this count was properly sustained. — 3 Elliott on Railroads, § 1265C.
The car to be loaded had been left on a siding some hundred feet or more from the place at which the lumber could be most conveniently loaded upon it. With the knowledge and acquiescence of defendant’s depot
According to our view of the case there was no error in the rulings on evidence. The facts plaintiff unsuccessfully sought to elicit were of no consequence. If plaintiff had got favorable answers to his questions, the burden of proof resting upon him, a favorable issue in his case would still have depended upon a mere speculation which the jury had no right to indulge.
Affirmed.