One of defendant’s street car lines extends along Ingersoll Avenue. This avenue is intersected by Twenty-third Street. The plaintiff, a resident of Olarinda, had been visiting Mrs. Nichols, who resided on Twenty-third Street, to the north of Ingersoll Avenue, several days. At about 9:30 o’clock in the evening of July 16, 1918, they, having attended a picture show, boarded an Ingersoll Avenue car at Eighth and Walnut Streets, Mrs. Nichols paying the fares, and, as the seats were all taken, they stood near the railing about the conductor. Mrs. Nichols testified that she stopped “right where the conductor stands, taking hold of the rod, and Mrs. Walters was in front of me. She turned around facing me, and we stand there talking. The car was an old type car, open at the rear, the conductor at the rear of the car with a stand, and you walked behind him and step up into the main body of the car. There was a little railing, ordinary gas pipe, around the conductor, about waist high. I took hold of this railing with my right hand. Mrs. Walters was
The witness explained that between the first stopping of the car and when it started again was “two or three seconds, an inappreciable sort of time;” that “there was no signal given of the second starting of the car, though the bell was rung for the first. The door was open at the first stop, and continued open until the second stop.” The plaintiff corroborated the foregoing testimony, swearing that:
“The car stopped, and I, starting to go out of the car the same way I got on, took and leaned towards Mrs. Nichols, and she said, ‘The other way, Bess.’ I stepped back, keeping my right foot on the floor and moving my left foot; and as I started, the car started with a jerk, and hit me with the full force; and I went to the back of the car and rear; and I threw out this arm, catching hold of the rail with the left here, and throwing my foot back to catch myself, and braced my body and keep from going down; and my heel went in the crack of the floor, and my ankle, quicker than a flash, turned over, and hit against those cleats. Q. How do you describe the starting of the car? A. It was very quick, and jerked, just violently.”
Both witnesses testified that about 18 or 20 inches of the flooring was smooth, joining which was flooring, with cleats from a quarter to a half of an inch thick, nailed thereon; that between the cleats and the smooth floor was a crevice, about three quarters of an inch in width. The plaintiff testified:
*199 ! 11 grabbed a hold of the rod, and my heel went back in that ditch. My ankle turned, and hit against those cleats.”
She also said that, had Mrs. Nichols not caught her, she would have gone to the floor; that the start after the car had stopped “jerked me * * * around the place where the conductor stands.”
“Q. When the car first stopped, you started to go out the entrance way, did you not? A. I let go of the rod and just started, but I didn’t go. Q. And Mrs. Nichols said: ‘The other way, Bess?’ A. She did. Q. You turned around to go out the other way? A. I did. Q. And that is when the start came, was it not? A. When the car jerked, yes. * * * I hadn’t got a chance to turn to start towards the door; I had set my left foot back to turn, when it came. Q. Which way were you facing when the jerk came? A. South. Q. You had not turned at all? A. Yes, I turned this way, and went to step my left foot back. Q. You were still facing south when the jerk came? A. Yes. Q. You did not get turned clear around? A. No, I hadn’t time to. Q. How far did the car move in that jerk, as you call it? A. Well, there was a car’s length, judging from the place we had to get off. * * * The ear stopped again; it didn’t more than get started, till it stopped again. ’ ’
Both witnesses say the conductor was looking towards the door all the time, and that the car had gone considerably past the place where it ordinarily stops, about a car’s length. Mrs. Nichols swore that the jerk of the car threw her against the railing; that “the car started with a jerk, after it had come to a dead standstill, and moved forward about a car’s length, and then stopped again with a jerk. * * * Mrs. Walters let loose of this rail with her left hand, after the car came to a stop for us to get off. * * * Q. You' say this car started with a jerk ? What kind of a jerk, did you say ? A. A decided jerk. ’ ’
She also testified that there was no signal by the conductor to the motorm'an to start up, after the car first stopped, and no warning was given that it was about to start.
The jury might have found from this evidence that the employees stopped the car and opened the door for plaintiff and her companion to leave the car, and that, as plaintiff stepped
“When a ear stops, to enable a passenger to alight, it is bound to wait a sufficient length of time to enable him to do so, and that it is negligence to start while he is attempting to get to the ground, or is in a position which would be rendered perilous by the motion of the car.”
As approving this rule, see Lang v. Marshalltown L., P. & R. Co., 166 Iowa 548; Heinze v. Interurban R. Co., 139 Iowa 189; Boice v. Des Moines City R. Co., 153 Iowa 472; Farrell v. Citizens’ L. & R. Co., 137 Iowa 309. Ordinarily, injuries consequent on sudden movements, jolts, jerks, or lunges of street cars are not actionable, unless unusual and unnecessary. But the implied contract of such a common carrier is to carry safely, and this necessarily includes the furnishing of reasonable opportunity to alight from the car or train safely at the end of the journey; and any movement of the cars after the passenger may be said to have been invited to alight, before he has had a reasonable opportunity to do so, is deemed negligent, whether such movement be unusual and unnecessary or not. Having been induced by the defendant’s servants to attemipt to leave the cars or train, its duty attaches to stop the train or car a sufficient length of time to enable the passenger to reach the platform or ground in safety; and this duty relates to the place where plaintiff had been induced by the conduct of the servants and the stopping of the train to believe he was to alight, and not to the final stopping of the cars or train, after it moves a few feet farther on. Nashville, C. & St. L. R. Co. v. Akin, 140 Tenn. 34 (203 S. W. 329); Chicago & A. R. Co. v. Arnol, 144 Ill. 261 (19 L. R. A. 313); Chesapeake & O. R. Co. v. Borders, 140 Ky. 548 (140 Am. St. 396); Benoit v. Boston & N. S. R. Co., 216 Mass. 320 (103 N. E. 830). See, also, 4 Ruling Case Law 1245, and cases cited therein. If the witnesses are to be believed, the company’s em