54 So. 626 | Ala. | 1911
Plaintiff sued for damages for personal injury, alleging in the most general way, after stating the relation of passenger and carrier between him and defendant, that defendant so negligently operated one of its cars, a part of the train upon which he was, that by reason of such negligence he received great personal injuries, setting them out according to their nature and extent. The case made by the evidence offered on behalf of plaintiff was as follows: Plaintiff, his daughter, Mrs. Lemley, and Mrs. Lemley’s child, an infant in arms, had purchased tickets and had taken passage to Limrock. The witnesses with one accord say that the train stopped at Limrock. The evidence was in conflict as to the length of the stop, but there was enough making for the plaintiff’s view of the case to justify the jury
We feel constrained to say that Ave concur in this Anew of the facts. Plaintiff and his daughter Avere sitting near the front door of the car. When Limrock station was announced, they prepared to alight. Plaintiff had a suit case in his right hand. His daughter had her babe on her left arm. The daughter led the way. Plaintiff followed as closely after as he could. Mrs. Lemley testified “I was going‘down the steps Avhen the train started, father right behind me. As'he .started down the steps, the train gave a quick jerk and jerked my hold loose. It Ayas going so fast I fell off. And while I Avas falling — pa AA’as right in behind me and he —we started doAvn the same steps, and I fell off first, and it AA’as going so fast it throwed him above me. We Avere even with the depot platform when the train started. It started, and jerked my hold loose, and pitched me out. * * * I seen my father on the ground. I
* * * I had left hand hold of the iron bar, and I had suit case in my right hand. My face was next to depot when I recollect I passed the depot.” It is certain that, whether Mrs. Lemley was thrown by the starting of the train, or whether she voluntarily stepped off after the train had started forward, the flagman caught her, so that, as it appears, neither she nor her babe suffered harm. It was well sustained, and we do- not construe plaintiff’s testimony to the contrary, that plaintiff reached the ground one to two car lengths from the place where the flagman caught his daughter. Meantime the train had gathered speed. It seems clear that the jerk incident to the starting of tire train did not dislodge plaintiff from the train. Plaintiff and his daughter alone testified that there was a jerk. On the other hand-, Haney and dayb-rook, witnesses for plaintiff, both of whom were on the train and were apprised of the acci
If the evidence for the defendant be laid out of view; it may be possible to account for Mrs. Lemley’s experience by referring it to the mere starting of the train as she was in the act of descending from the step, and this notwithstanding her own and plaintiff’s careful insistence upon it that there was a jerk. And if she had been injured and were prosecuting this suit in consequence, we would not deny her right to recover. But the movements and hurt of plaintiff cannot with probability be accounted for in that manner. He fell at a different time and place. On plaintiff’s evidence it seems highly probable that plaintiff voluntarily stepped or jumped from the train after it had been stopped at the Limrock station and had been again set in motion. The evidence adduced by the defendant makes it about as certain as any conclusion can be which depends on human testimony. Witnesses Brown, Gentle, and Bulman, who lived in the neighborhood and who seem to have no interest in or connection with the defendant, testified that the plaintiff and his daughter stepped or jumped from the train after it had begun to move away from the station. These are corroborated by Atchley, who was defendant’s station agent, and by Short, who was at the time a flagman on defendant’s train, but had severed his connection with it before the time of the trial; and all these witnesses testify that the flagman called to plaintiff to wait while he was yet on the steps. Plaintiff denies that he heard this, and we will assume that he did not; but, whether he did or not, this evidence clearly shows that plaintiff’s actions indicated his purpose to get off the
It has been laid down that it is not negligence as a matter of law to alight from a moving train. But it is obvious that there may be circumstances attending an attempt to do so in which it becomes the duty of the court, where the testimony is undisputed, to declare the passenger’s conduct negligent per se.—Hunter v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 150 Ala. 594, 43 South. 802, 9 L. R. A. (N. S.) 848. In the case at bar it is made to appear without contradiction that the plaintiff had not been at Limrock for 20 years. He had entered his sixty-sixth year. He had recently been ill and was weak. He carried a suit case in his right hand. It was dark. He had just come out of a lighted car. Under these conditions he blindly stepped or leaped from a train which was moving so rapidly as to cause him to.fall heavily to the ground. Furthermore, he left the car on the. left side as it moved. Incumbered as he was, it is highly probable that he stepped off in a direction perpendicular to the train’s line of motion, as several of the witnesses testified, or even with his face towards the rear of the train, according to the testimony of one of them. His own testimony leaves room for no other conclusion than that he stepped sidewise from the car. Under these circumstances, while it cannot be said there is no evidence to support plaintiff’s case, the great weight of the testimony supported defendant’s plea of contributory negligence, and it is our judgment that the motion for a new .trial should have been granted.—L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Lee, 97 Ala. 325, 12 South. 48; Central R. R. Co. v. Letcher, 69 Ala. 106, 44 Am. Rep. 505.
Reversed and remanded.