The first count of the complaint is manifestly intended to charge a breach of defendant’s duty to plaintiff, in that defendant’s street ear was stopped, and plaintiff was invited to'alight therefrom, at a place not safe and convenient for that purpose.
It is shown that plaintiff was a pay passenger on defendant’s car, his destination being the village of Prichard; and the averment is that—
“AVhen said car reached Prichard it was, by the servants in charge thereof, stopped at a point where there was no platform, and where the ground was irregular and rough, and a considerable distance below the last step of said car, and where it was dangerous for a person on crutches to alight; and when plaintiff, at the invitation of the defendant, attempted to alight from said car, the irregularities of the ground, and its distance below the step of the cgr from which plaintiff had to alight, caused him to fall and to break one of his legs at a point above the knee.”
It is further averred that—
“Defendant negligently stopped its said car at said point, and invited plaintiff to there leave the car, and that plaintiff’s injuries were the proximate result of the defendant’s said negligence.”
“If the suppression of plaintiff’s urine is in part the result of infection caused in the course of his treatment of the injuries to his leg, then plaintiff, if entitled to recover anything, may recover for his suffering and disability, if any, resulting therefrom.”
The complaint, under which such damages were thus expressly allowed to be recovered, contained only the following allegations of injury:
«* * * Caused him to fall and to break one of his legs at a point above the knee, and from the injuries so received he has suffered, and will continue to hereafter suffer, greatly in body and mind, and has lost and will continue to lose much time, and he has been permanently injured and disabled. [Italics ours.] It will be observed that the only injury averred is a broken leg, and that the only consequential damage averred is predicated upon that specific injury. The physical and mental suffering, loss of time, and permanent disability, for which damages are specially claimed, are attributed solely and specifically to the broken leg as their causa causans; no other hurt being shown. Nor is there any general averment of bodily injury, direct or consequential.
' “Special damages are such as result naturally but not necessarily from the wrong complained of. * * * It is a familiar rule of pleading that, before such damages can be recovered, they must be specially alleged, to the end that the defendant, apprised by general averments of damage of á claim of such only as necessarily result from the wrong, may not be taken by surprise on the trial. And upon such special averment there must be strict correspondence of proof; the defendant has a right to assume that that which is thus particularly alleged, and that only, will be attempted to be proved, and to prepare for the trial accordingly.” A. G. S. R. R. Co. v. Tapia,94 Ala. 226 , 231,10 South. 236 , 237; Irby v. Wilde,150 Ala. 402 ,43 South. 574 ; City Delivery Co. v. Henry,139 Ala. 161 ,34 South. 389 ; Dowdall v. King,97 Ala. 635 ,12 South. 405 .
In its general aspects, the case of Kleiner v. Third Av. R. Co.,
“In this case the allegations were unlike those in the Ehrgott Case,96 N. Y. 264 , 277 [cited in Grasselli Chemical Co. v. Davis, supra] as the plaintiff particularly specified several injuries which she sustained by reason of the accident, and alleged that she thereby sustained permanent injuries, thus, in effect, limiting her permanent injuries to those previously alleged.”
The same stricture is applicable to the complaint as here exhibited.
We are clear to the conclusion that there could be no recovery, under the specifications of this complaint, for any disease or disorder of the bladder, though it were proximately caused by the breaking of plaintiff’s leg, or by the medical treatment and physical confinement and disability resulting therefrom.
A just application of this rule of pleading would require either a specification of that injury, or a claim for general bodily injury comprehensive enough to include that special injury, and not in terms confined to the sequela? of a broken leg.
We hold that the trial judge erred in his *557 instruction to the jury authorizing a recovery for the suffering and disability resulting from the suppression of plaintiff’s urine, and also in refusing to give at defendant’s request charge “E>,” covering the same proposition.
Many other questions are presented by tbe assignments of error, chiefly upon the giving and refusing of charges, including the refusal of the general affirmative charge for defendant on the second count.
We deem it unnecessary to pass upon all of those questions, and what we have said will suffice for the purposes of another trial.
Let the judgment be reversed, and the cause remanded, for the reasons above set forth.
Reversed and remanded.
