— Section 5489 of the Code of 1907 makes it the duty of every person, company, or corporation, owning or operating any railroad through the corporate limits of any incorporated city or town of more than 1,000 inhabitants, to establish and maintain one or more depots for the accommodation of passengers and storage of freights. This court held on good authority in the case of Page v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 129 Ala. 232, 29 South. 676, that no such duty exists, unless imposed by the charter of the railroad company, or by statutory regulation, or by some other legislative au-. thorization conferring power upon the Railroad Commission to impose the duty.
The complaint in this case seems to have been drawn with the idea that the section of the Code to which we have referred lay at the foundation of the cause of action the pleader was attempting to state. But we think the statute has nothing to do with the case. If defendant built a station house and waiting room at a place where it was not required, by the terms of the section or the mandate of the Railroad Commission, so' to build, that fact evidenced sufficiently its appreciation of the reasonable needs of the traveling public at that point; and, as long as a waiting room is there kept and maintained, the railroad company will not be heard to say that its provision for the convenience of passengers is a mere gratuity which it may capriciously deny to any particular passenger. Whether the waiting room at Albertville was provided in obedience to an express com
As will be seen by reference to the complaint, plaintiff complains that, after she had traveled as a passenger on defendant’s train, and after, so far as the operation of the train involved her safety, she had been safely deposited at her destination, she was denied the shelter of defendant’s waiting room under circumstances which called, as any one would say, for the offices of good neighborhood ■ at least. The question of judicial interest is whether, in view of the facts averred, defendant failed in any legal duty it owed plaintiff.
In the Cyclopedia of Law and Procedure a rule is stated as follows: After the passenger has departed from the car and has had reasonable time and opportunity to avoid further danger from the operation of the car, or further necessity of relations with the servants of the carrier, he ceases to be a passenger and! stands toward the carrier as one of the general public.” —6 Cyc. 542. Attention to the cases cited to the text will show that the rule was formulated with reference to street railroads which, as a general thing, deposit their passengers, not upon the carrier’s property, but upon the public streets. The rule of this court in such cases may fall within the implications of the quoted text, but it may be well to say that our decisions hold that the duty of a street railway carrier- is not performed when it lands its passenger at a time and at a place of such unknown environment to him that, in his first effort to depart after alighting, he walks into unknown danger. — Montgomery St. Ry. Co. v. Mason, 133 Ala. 508, 32 South. 261.
Most of the counts, all but the sixth and last, allege only that defendant’s agent ordered and commanded plaintiff to quit the waiting room and defendant’s premises “before she had reasonable time to proceed on her journey some distance out in the conutry,”- but what the pleader meant by “reasonable time” is made clear enough by the context, where the attendant circumstances are alleged. The gist of these counts is, not that plaintiff was denied the right and opportunity to depart, nor that there was an Interference with her, nor any lack of due provision for her unless that is to be inferred from the facts stated, to wit, she was a woman, she was old, the weather was inclement, and she was not prepared to. proceed upon her journey. These counts very clearly, though inferentially, reveal the pleader’s opinion and conclusion that the special circumstances alleged, without more, clothed plaintiff with a right to stay for a length of time which, but for the special circumstances alleged,, would have been unreasonable. De
Generally speaking, the relation of carrier and passenger has its origin in a contract by which the carrier assumes to do no more than to carry the passenger between agreed points, and we must assume that such was the case here. The duty to care for the passenger’s comfort and safety is raised by law. It lasts only while the relation lasts. Universally it is held that if a person goes to the carrier’s station at a reasonable time, with the bona fide intention to take passage, he thereby imposes upon the carrier the duty of providing for him a safe way of ingress to and egress from its cars and a safe waiting place. — L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Glasgow, 179 Ala. 151, 60 South. 103. In certain cases the statute to which we referred in the beginning makes it the duty of the carrier to establish and maintain depots for the accommodation of passengers, and the nature of the comforts and conveniences to be provided in connection with waiting rooms in all cases may be inferred from section 5181 of the Code. But the literal command of the last-mentioned section is that every railroad company shall, when required by the Railroad
We would say that appellee has correctly conceived its rights and duties in the ordinary case of a passenger who, having been landed at his destination, has nothing to do but to proceed upon his journey by other ways. In such case the carrier, in the absence of special conditions, to the statement of which we will shortly come, has discharged its full duty. It need have no concern about the passenger’s further journey, and in consequence is under no legal duty to house the passenger while he makes preparation therefor. In the absence of actual notice to the contrary, the carrier may assume that the passenger has made his own preparations and is physically able to go. In such case the relation of carrier and passenger has ceased, and upon the carrier as such the law imposes no further obligation.
But it does not follow that occasions may not arise in which the carrier may owe a duty to one who lingers upon its premises. There is a law of necessity which operates for the conservation of human life and safety without regard to relations that may be established by contract. It may become necessary that one who has been a passenger shall stay in order to save himself from grievous bodily harm; and, in the determination of the carrier’s duty to a person so circumstanced, it is
Referring to the several counts of the complaint, it will be seen that the other counts were bad, but that, while the pleader probably proceeded in part upon an erroneous theory of the law of his case, in the sixth count he stated a good case within the principles we have asserted, though incumbering his statement with irrelevant and unnecessary matter. The demurrer, therefore, as for any objection which it specified as to count six, should have been overruled.
Reversed and remanded.