43 So. 802 | Ala. | 1907
Rehearing
On Application for Rehearing and on Application to Set Aside Judgment and Order of Submission.
The court adheres to all that was said in respect to the rule as to the proper mode and practice of assigning errors on the’record, and the. application for rehearing must therefore be denied. But
To that end it is ordered that the judgment of affirmance and the order of submission be set aside and the cause, restored to the docket. All the Justices concur.
Opinion on the Merits
On the Merits.
The plaintiff sued to recover damages for personal injury sustained by him in alighting from a moving train of the defendant. The complaint, as amended, contained four counts, to each and all of which the plea of the general issue? was interposed, and to the first, third, and fourth counts special pleas of contributory negligence. The judgment entry recites that issue was joined on plea of not, guilty, and on special pleas 7 and 9, and on special replication No. 2. Upon the conclusion of the whole evidence, the court, at the request of the defendant in writing, gave, the general affirmative charge with hypothesis to find for the defendant.
The second count of the complaint was intended, and so treated by both the plaintiff and defendant, as one for willful and intentional wrong and injury. Then? was a total absence of evidence showing or tending to show willful or intentional wrong on the part of the defendant’s servants, or such gross negligence as would he tantamount to w.antonness; and hence no error was committed in the giving of the general charge to find for the defendant as to the second count.
The third count of the. complaint bases the. plaintiff's right of recovery for the injury sustained for alleged uegligence in the management and operation of the train while the defendant’s conductor was assisting plaintiff
The iirst and fourth counts of the complaint proceed upon the theory that the train on AAdiich the- plaintiff AA'as a passenger was not- scheduled to stop at Falkville, plaintiff's station for debarking, but Avas one of the trains of the defendant company which, instead of alAvays stopping at said station for the purpose of discharging its passenger's, usually sloAved' doAvn and slackedened its speed to a rate rendering it sufficiently safe for passengers to debark at said station, and all of Avhich the plaintiff knew, and that the plaintiff, acting on the invitation of the conductor to alight from said train at said time and place, and believing it- to be safe, in attempting to alight Avas throAvn to the ground and injured. The plaintiff’s OAvn testimony shows that Avlien the train Avas nearing Falkville the plaintiff was asleep, and the conductor came to him and awakened him “and called out ‘Falkville,’ or ‘This is Falkville,’ and then avh]bed towards the door and opened it and stood to one side; that plaintiff immediately got up and Avith an umbrella and grip in his hapds started towards the door, following the conductor. When witness (plaintiff) got to the door, he passed out by the conductor onto the platform, and then onto the steps of
The undisputed evidence in the case shows that, when the conductor aroused the plaintiff from his sleep and announced the station of Falkville, the train had begun to slacken its speed and from that time was continuing to slow down for the station until it came to a standstill, which, in fact, it did immediately after the plaintiff alighted and fell, receiving his iniuries. 'The first and fourth counts aver that the plaintiff was “directed and invited” by the defendant’s conductor to debark from the train. The insistence in argument of the plaintiff is that in attempting to alight from the train he was acting upon the invitation of defendant’s conductor, and that in so doing he did no more than an ordinarily prudent man would have done under the same circumstances ,and that, therefore, he was free
We recognize the general rule that alighting from a moving train is not. necessarily negligence per se; but, as was said in Watkins v. Birmingham Ry. & Elec. Co., 120 Ala. 152, 24 South. 394, 43 L. R. A. 297, “there may be, it is true, exceptional circumstances attending the attempt thus to alight, such as the great speed of the train, the age or infirmity of the passenger, or his being-incumbered with bundles or children, or other facts wdiicli render the attempt so obviously dangerous that the court may, where the testimony is undisputed, declare as matter of law that the passenger’s conduct was reckless and negligent.” Here the undisputed facts are that the train was at the time running from six to ten miles an hour; that the plaintiff stood upon the steps from two to three minutes before attempting to alight, able to discern, and in fact discerning, the general outline of objects which the train was passing, and thereby enabled to determine the speed of the train, and familiar with the place and its surroundings, having-lived there for 15 years, and, being at the time incumbered with his baggage, voluntarily attempted to alight from the train. In making the venture it is very evident that the plaintiff did not rely upon any invitation, express or implied, from the conductor to debark. By his own statement he stood upon the steps from two to three minutes while the train was continuing to slacken its speed, and neither the conductor nor any other servant of the defendant was on the platform, and no one said anything to him. He exercised his own judgment and made his own calculations, without any fault attributable to any one else than himself, and there was
The defendant being entitled to the general affirmative charge, as requested, this renders unnecessary consideration of other rulings of the court assigned as error.—Smith v. Ga. Pac. Ry. Co., 88 Ala. 540, 7 South. 119, 7 L. R. A. 323, 16 Am. St. Rep. 63; Bently v. Ga. Pac. Ry. Co., 86 Ala. 484, 6 South. 37.
Finding no reversible error in the record, the judgment appealed frpm will he affirmed.
Affirmed.
Lead Opinion
We have on several occasions recently called attention of attorneys to the fact that the assigning of error on separate sheets of paper and pasting the same on the page or pages of the transcript is not a compliance with the. rule of practice as to the assignment of errors that has always obtained in this court. The transcript is intended to be a permanent record, and is required by law to be bound for permanent preservation as a record of this court, and the assignment of errors, when made on its pages, becomes a part of the record. In the present case the assignment of errors is made on separate sheets of paper, which are attached to a page, of the transcript with ordinary pa-pen- fasteners, subject to easy detachment and removal. This is not a compliance with the rule, and cannot, therefore, be regarded or considered as an assignment of errors on the transcript; and the judgment appealed from will be affirmed for want of assignment of errors in the transcript.
Affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
entertain the opinion that whether plaintiff was guilty of negligence in alighting from the train, under the. circumstances shown by the testimony, was a question for the determination of the jury, and not one of law for the court, and therefore cannot concur in the conclusion announced.