44 So. 638 | Ala. | 1907
Action by plaintiff to recover damages for personal injuries received, while a passenger upon one of defendant’s cars, by the falling of an intoxicated passenger upon or against her. There seems to be no dispute as to the principles of law which control the decision of this case, but the controversy arises over their applicability to the peculiar facts as deduced from the testimony. The evidence tends to show that the offending passenger was intoxicated and boisterous, and that just prior to his fall which occasioned the injury to plaintiff’s limb he had fallen upon the floor of the car. It also tends to show that there was a vacant seat which he could have occupied, and that the conductor in charge of the car knew of his intoxicated condition, his boisterousness, and of his having fallen, previous to his fall against the plaintiff. Both falls, it appears, were while the car was in motion. A carrier of passengers owes to the passenger the duty of protecting him from violence and insults of other passengers, so far as this can be done by the exercise of a high degree of care; and such carrier will be held responsible for its own or its servants’ neglect in this particular, when by the exercise of proper care the acts of violence might have been foreseen and prevented. — Batton v. S. & N. A. R. R. Co., 77 Ala. 591, 592, 54 Am. Rep. 80, and other cases cited in appellant’s brief.
The next point insisted upon asserts the proposition that, in order to hold the defendant liable, it must appear that the conduct of the passenger causing the injury complained of was such as to have made it the duty of the conductor to eject or exclude him from the car before the injury occurred. This seems to be the principle embodied in the two special instructions, numbered
There is no error shown by the record, and the judgment must be affirmed.
Affirmed.