The plaintiff,, appellant, was injured’in a public street in the city of Birmingham. He was a pedestrian, not a person intending'to- take passage on the defendant’s, appellee’s, street car. He was injured in one of two ways, viz. run into by the defendant’s street car while he was on the track, or hit by the open doors leading into-the front platform or. vestibule of the street ear; the doors when opeln extending beyond the lateral line of the street car about 18 or 20 inches. The defendant’s evidence was to the effect that plaintiff was hit by the! ear proper; the doors mentioned not being open at the time plaintiff was stricken.
*284 The general affirmative! charges for the defendant were given on the issues tendered by counts 3 and 4. The presently important averments of count 3 were these!:
“The plaintiff avers that he suffered said injuries and damages as a -proximate consequence of the negligence of the agents or servants of defendant who were acting within the line- and scope of their authority and employment in the operation of said car; and that said negligence consisted in this: That said Avenue K or Eleventh Avenue South is a public thoroughfare of said city of Birmingham; that the same is situated in a very populous locality in said city, and that said avenue is used constantly by the public, both pedestrians and in vehicles, and that persons were frequently on or very near the railway tracks of defendant at the hour of the day and place where said injuries were received by plaintiff as aforesaid, which great use of said avenue was well known to said agents or servants of defendant; that it was then in the nighttime. and that it was the custom or usage of those operating cars on defendant’s said line of railway to stop the cars which were proceeding in the direction that said car was then proceeding for the purpose of allowing persons who were on said avenue at or about the place where plaintiff was at said time to board said cars and to take passage thereon, which said custom or usage was well known to said agents or servants of' defendants; and plaintiff further avers that he was at said place in company with another person who was at said place for the purpose of taking_ passage on said car, and pláintiff avers that said servants or agents of defendant, knowing that persons were likely to be on or very near said track at said place, and knowing that some person would probably be injured thereby, and with reckless indifference to the consequences, willfully or. wantonly operated said car at a rapid rate of speed so that the same or a -part of said car struck the plaintiff, thereby proximately causing said injuries to him as aforesaid.”
After appropriating all of the averments of count 3 down, to the allegation that plaintiff, on the occasion of his injury, was accompanying a friend to take passage on this street car, count 4 concludes with these averments:
“And plaintiff avers that said agents or servants well knowing that persons were likely to be at said place at said time and knowing that injury to some persons was likely to be caused thereby and with reckless indifference to the consequences willfully or wantonly caused the door or gate of said car to be opened to and project a distance of, to wit, 18 inches from the side of said car while said car was being operated at a rapid rate of speed, so that said gate or door of said car came into contact with or struck the plaintiff, thereby proximately causing the injuries and damage to plaintiff as aforesaid.”
In view of the whole evidence the court was justified in giving, at defendant’s request, the general affirmative charge against a recovery under the third count. The dominant averment in that count (3), even when coupled with the motorman’s1 knowledge of the circumstances of custom and use described in the count, is the rapid speed at which the car was being operated. If the plaintiff’s theory is accepted in its utmost breadth and strength, tjhe speed of the car, even when coupled with the motorman’s *285 knowledge of the circumstances of custom and use described in the count, bore no causal connection with plaintiff’s injury. He saw the car coming a considerable distance away. He undertook, from a point near, not on, the track, to signal the motorman tc¡ stop, that his companion might take the car. According to his theory, and evidence introduced for him clearly tended to support it, he was struck by the projecting side door or gate, not by the body or front part of the car; a contention asserted by evidence adduced by defendant. The point at which his theory places him when stricken was safe from the sweep of the car, hut for the projection of the door or gate of which he is not shown to have had any previous knowledge. Uncontradieted proof of the facts averred in count 3 would not have justified the ascription of plaintiff’s injury for proximate, cause to the rapid operation of the car under the circumstances averred in count 3.
The report of the appeal will reproduce the special charges, given at defendant’s instance, set forth in assignments of error 3, 4, 5, and 6.
For the error committed in withdrawing from the jury the issues tendered by count 4, the judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
