81 S.E. 182 | S.C. | 1914
March 25, 1914. The opinion of the Court was delivered by This case was tried before Judge Shipp at the October term of the Court for Edgefield county, 1912, and was a complaint by plaintiff against the defendant for alleged personal injuries sustained by him while traveling as a passenger on the defendant's train from McCormick to Augusta, Ga., during a fair in Augusta. The alleged injury occurred in Augusta, Ga., and the case was tried under the laws of the State of Georgia. After the plaintiff had closed his testimony, the defendant made a motion for nonsuit, which at that time was refused, but after the defendant offered part of its testimony the nonsuit was granted. Plaintiff appeals.
The grounds of appeal, five in number, impute error on the part of his Honor in granting nonsuit; the contention of the plaintiff being that the plaintiff's conduct, on the occasion of his injury, was not negligence per se, and involved *468 questions of fact, under all of the circumstances, that should have been submitted to the jury for determination. Let us see what the undisputed and uncontradicted facts show. The evidence shows that on November 9, 1911, the plaintiff, who was 19 years old, purchased a ticket and return from McCormick, S.C. to Augusta, Ga.; that he boarded the defendant's train at McCormick, S.C. and took a seat in passenger coach with Jaro and remained in that seat until he got to Clark's Hill, when he left the same to get a drink of water; that the train was crowded with passengers at that time going to the fair, and, after Talbert vacated his seat to get a drink of water, some one took it. Talbert remained standing in the aisle in the forward end of the coach near the stove. There was standing room for him in the coach, though it was crowded, but Talbert says that it was more comfortable outside, and for this reason he rode part of the way on the outside on the platform of the coach and held onto the door at times, and when conductor opened the door held onto the railing. After the train left Sibley Mills and was slacking up to stop. Talbert went from the platform down on the steps of the car and leaned out beyond the line of the coach looking backwards. He testifies his purpose was to ascertain if the train had left Sibley Mills; that he had been to Augusta before and knew the location. It was within the company's yard in the city of Augusta. It is alleged in the complaint that his head was from six to ten inches beyond the line of the coach. In his testimony he states that he was standing on the steps leaning out beyond the line of the coach looking backwards, when his head struck against a car, which was standing on the sidetrack, which train was then passing. One of plaintiff's witnesses testified that he saw plaintiff on the ground just after the injury, and that there was sufficient room between the freight car and passenger car on the main line for him to stand, and says: "I believe I could have stood very safely. There was clearance room for the cars to pass." No one *469 measured the distance between the cars, but it is clearly established that there was sufficient room for safe clearance. There was testimony that there was room in the smoker, and in there no one was required to stand. Other passengers were standing on the platform with plaintiff, and no one was hurt except Talbert, and at the time of his injury he was on the lower step, leaning out, looking backwards, with his head beyond the line of the car.
While it is the law and it was the duty of the defendant, the carrier, to furnish the passengers with seats, and a failure to do so would furnish the passengers a suit for damages for breach of contract, and a failure on the part of the carrier to furnish seats for passengers, under circumstances which show the carrier had every reason to know that the accommodations furnished were not sufficient, will furnish ground enough to sustain an action for punitive damages, if the failure is due to wanton, wilful, or reckless indifference to the rights of passengers (Cave v. Seaboard Air Line Ry.,
"A passenger riding on the steps of the platform of the car and swinging out is negligent and cannot recover for injuries received." 4 Elliott on R.R., pars. 1630-1663.
The rule of law as declared by the Georgia Courts is that a passenger on the steps of the platform of the car, who leans out and allows, as it were, his center of gravity to go beyond the line of the car from the platform steps, so that if he discovered an obstruction in the way he cannot recover himself, but falls off and is injured, he cannot recover.Paterson v. Central R.R.,
It is said in Benedict v. Minneapolis St. Louis R.,
In Georgia, Southern Florida Railroad v. Murray,
In Paterson v. Central R.R.,
By the Civil Code of Georgia, sec. 4426, we find the following that applies both as to employees and passengers as a rule: "If by the use of ordinary care the party injured could have avoided the injury caused by the alleged negligence of the railroad company, he is not entitled to recover."
In Sundy's case,
In Lindsay v. Southern Ry.,
In Simmons v. S.A.L. Ry.,
We think that, applying the facts as proven to the law of Georgia that the nonsuit was properly granted, the evidence fails to show any negligence on the part of the defendant that in any manner contributed to his injury as the proximate cause, but, on the contrary, that Talbert was injured by his own negligence and want of care on his part, and this negligence and want of care was the sole cause of his injury. There is no evidence in the case whereby a reasonable man could have drawn any other conclusion or inference.
All exceptions are overruled, and judgment affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE GAGE did not sit in this case.
FOOTNOTE. — As to the right of a passenger to a seat, see note 22 L.R.A. 259.
Upon the liability to a passenger riding on platform of railroad car with knowledge of carrier, see note in 1 L.R.A. (N.S.) 1145.
On the question of riding on platform of railroad car as negligence, see note in 29 L.R.A. (N.S.) 325. *475