62 So. 871 | Ala. | 1913
— In the case of Button anti Wife v. Smith £ North Alabama Railroad Company, 77 Ala. 591, 51 Am. Rep. 80, this court, quoting from Britton v. Atlanta & Charlotte Railway Company, 88 N. C. 536, 13 Am. Rep. 719, said: “The carrier owes to the passenger the duty of protecting him from the violence and assaults of his fellow passengers or intruders, and will be held responsible for his own or his servants’ neglect in this particular when, by the exercise of proper care, the acts of violence might have been foreseen and prevented; and, while not required to furnish a police force sufficient-to overcome all force, when unexpectedly and suddenly offered, it is its duty to provide ready help, sufficient to protect the passenger from assaults from every quarter which might reasonably be expected to occur, under the circumstances of the case and the condition of the parties.” In this same case this court said that the duty of a common carrier to a passenger while at a station awaiting the arrival of a train “ought not to be greater than that of an innkeeper, who is never held liable for trespass committed ordinarily by strangers upon the person of his guest.”
In Beale on Innkeepers and Hotels we find the following : “It is a duty of a carrier to protect his passenger from injury, and of an innkeeper to protect his guest from injury, to the best of his ability, by the use of reasonable means. The innkeeper must take reasonable steps to protect his guests.” — Beale on Innkeepers and Hotels, § 171. An innkeeper owes to his guest the affirmative duty to protect his guest from an imlawful assault at the hands of a stranger, and from an assault of a servant not lawfully committed by such seiwant in resisting an act of violence — actual or reasonably apparent — at the hands of such guest. If an assault is committed by a servant of an inn upon the person of a
The above strict rule does not, of course, obtain when a passenger of a common carrier, or a guest of an inn, is assaulted and beaten, or insulted, by a person not a servant. In the latter case the common carrier, or innkeeper, owes his passenger or guest protection against the lawless violence of a stranger, but that duty of protection does not arise until such carrier or innkeeper has reasonable grounds for believing that such violence or insult will occur unless steps are taken to prevent it. When that occurs then the carrier or inkeeper must at once take all such reasonable steps as the circumstances will admit of to prevent the threatened injury or insult, and if he fails to do so, then he is liable in damages for the consequences. “The injury for which the carrier is liable must have been of such a character, and perpetrated under such circumstances, as that it might reasonably have been anticipated or naturally expected to occur.” — Fewings v. Mendenhall (Minn. Sup. Ct.), 55 L. R. A. 713, note.
■ We quote, on the subject now under consideration, the following from appellee’s brief: “Carriers are not
2. This case was tided upon the third count of the complaint as amended. To this count the appellant, the Southern Railway Company, filed a demurrer, Avhich demurrer the trial court overruled. Just before the case was submitted to the jury the name of LeAvis Malone, as one of the defendants, was, by amendment, stricken from this count and the appellant did not refile its demurrer to the count after this last amendment.
As the sufficiency of count 3 was tested by demurrei-, we must, under our rules, take the allegations of the count most strongly against the appellee. So construed, the count charges an assault and battery upon appellee, while a passenger of appellant, by a stranger and not by a servant of appellant. The gravamen, therefore, of the count is the negligent failure of the appellant to protect appellee against an unlawful assault and battery at the hands of a stranger. In such cases the true rule seems to be that the carrier is not liable unless the agents or employees of the carrier “lmew, or, in the light of the surrounding circumstances, ought to have known, that danger was threatened or was to be apprehended and then tailed to use their authority and power to protect the passenger from the impending peril.”— Ball v. Chesapeake & O. R. Co., 93 Va. 44, 24 S. E. 467, 32 L. R. A. 792, 57 Am. St. Rep. 786.
In Batton and Wife v. South & North Alabama Railroad Company, supra, this court said: “The wrong or injury done the passenger by such stranger must have been of such a character, and perpetrated under such circumstances, as that it might reasonably have been anticipated, or naturally expected to occur.”
It is, in effect, in the excerpt from the appellee’s brief which we have above quoted admitted that, in a complaint seeking damages for such a wrong as we now have under consideration, it is essential that it shall be averred that the carrier knew, or from the attendant circumstances should have known, of the threatened injury in time to have averted it in order that a liability for such injury may be fixed upon such carrier. We have carefully parsed count 3, and we find in it no such averment. The count, it is true, as last amended concludes as follows: “All of which wrongs and injuries to the plaintiff were known to the said Southern Railway Company, or would have been known by it by the exercise of reasonable care and diligence.” In the first place, the plaintiff (appellee) had no “wrongs and injuries” until after he was set upon and beaten. In the second place, when a count contains alternative averments, as in this case, the strength of the count-, tested on demurrer, is to be determined by the allegations of the weakest alternative averment. The alternative averment “or would have been known by it by the exercise of reasonable care and diligence” is supported by
It is a familiar proposition that when a complaint seeks a recovery on the ground of simple negligence, the complaint must show, with definiteness, the facts out of which the duty to act springs. This being done, the negligent failure to perform the duty may be alleged in general terms. Count 3 does not, with sufficient certainty, set up facts showing a duty on the part of the appellant to protect the appellee from the wrongs set up in the complaint. It fails to show, with sufficient certainty, that the appellant knew, or that the attendant circumsta/uces were such that the appellant should have known, of the threatened battery upon appellee in time, by the exercise of due care, to have prevented it. The general allegation that appellant negligently failed to perform its duty to the appellee in the premises does not cure the defect. The count was subject to appellant’s demurrer, and the trial court committed reversible error in overruling it.
The judgment of the court below must therefore be reversed, and the cause remanded to the court below for further proceedings in accordance with the views expressed in this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.