Phoenix Railway Co. v. Beals

181 P. 379, 20 Ariz. 386, 1919 Ariz. LEXIS 185
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedMay 21, 1919
DocketCivil No. 1639
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 181 P. 379 (Phoenix Railway Co. v. Beals) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phoenix Railway Co. v. Beals, 181 P. 379, 20 Ariz. 386, 1919 Ariz. LEXIS 185 (Ark. 1919).

Opinion

ROSS, J.

Plaintiff, suing defendant for damages for personal injuries received while she was a passenger on one of its street-cars,vset forth her cause of /action in two counts. In the first count it was alleged that the street-ear on which she was riding stopped at the intersection of Washington Street and Central Avenue, Phoenix, and that, “while plaintiff was in the act of alighting from said car, and before plaintiff had time to alight and reach the pavement in safety, 'the defendant’s servants carelessly, recklessly and negligently started said car in motion, causing plaintiff to fall to the pavement with great force and violence.”

The negligence charged in the second count is neglect and failure “to keep its car in good condition and free from protruding bolts or other obstacles or parts of said car which could or would catch plaintiff’s skirts,” and by reason therépf “this plaintiff’s skirt caught in a bolt or some other obstacle or part of said ear, and while plaintiff was about to alight, this defendant, through its servants then in charge of said car, carelessly, negligently, and recklessly started said car in motion, and, beeahse of plaintiff’s skirt being caught on some obstacle as aforesaid, and because of defendant starting said car before plaintiff had reached thé pavement in safety, plaintiff was thrown’ on the pavement with great force and violence.”

The issues tendered were met by a general demurrer and general denial, and an affirmative defense that plaintiff was injured, if at all, through her own carelessness or omission or negligence or inadvertence by falling “upon the pavement at or near the intersection of Washington and Central Streets ... at a place entirely removed from and apart from the car of this defendant. ’ ’ ^

From a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff, this appeal is prosecuted.

[389]*389The errors assigned as occurring at the trial prejudicial to the rights of defendant may, we think, he designated under five headings: First, the refusal of the court to require the appellee to elect upon which count of her complaint she would ask a verdict; second, the refusal of the court to instruct a verdict for defendant as requested because of insufficient evidence to support the allegations of the complaint; third, in not taking from the jury all consideration of the alleged unsafe condition of the car by reason of the protruding bolts, etc., upon which plaintiff’s skirt was said to have caught for the reason that there was no evidence of any protruding bolts or other obstacles, or that defendant’s car was defective; fourth, in erroneously instructing the jury and in failing to instruct as requested and in modifying certain instructions requested by defendant; and, fifth, in refusing to grant a new trial upon the showing of newly discovered evidence.

The first assignment is without merit. It is permissible under the law for'a party to state his cause of action in one or more counts as the facts of his case may seem to him to demand or require. The pleader cannot always know or anticipate what the proof may develop so as confidently to rely upon a single statement of his cause of action. The privilege of stating his cause in different counts is granted so that a party whose cause is just may not be nonsuited or dismissed because of a variance in the pleadings and proof, or because of a failure to sustain one count when the evidence is sufficient to support another. And the case may be submitted on all the issues finding support in the evidence. Willard v. Carrigan, 8 Ariz. 70, 68 Pac. 538; Paducah Traction Co. v. Baker, 130 Ky. 360, 18 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1185, 113 S. W. 449.

The second and third points above stated are so closely related we will consider them together. The contention of appellant is that the undisputed evidence shows that the cause of the accident in which appellee was injured was the catching of her skirt on something as she was alighting, that the ear did not start until after she was falling, and that it was the catching of. her skirt on something for which appellant was not responsible, and not the starting of the car, that caused her to fall. In other words, it is claimed plaintiff would have fallen if the car had not started as it did, or at least that it may not be definitely determined to which cause, [390]*390the catching of her clothes or the starting of the car, the jury credited the accident.

The appellee’s explanation as to how the accident happened was:

“I proceeded to get off the car and my dress caught on a holt or something in the ear which held me, and I just had one foot from the car, and they started the car and threw me to the pavement and tore my dress.”

On cross-examination:

“Qp What did you do after it stopped? A. I started to get off the car. Q. Then the car started again? A. Yes, sir; it did. Q. Where were you when it started? A. I was falling to the pavement. Q. When it started? A. Yes, sir. Q. What was it that threw you to the pavement, Mrs. Beals, the starting of the car or the catching of your dress? A. Well, the starting of the car would have thrown me' to the pavement. Q. I want to know just what it was, the starting of the car or the catching of your dress? A. The starting of the car, I suppose. I don’t quite understand you. Q. Explain what occurred, Mrs. Beals, when you fell, in the best language you can and as you remember it. A. When I went to step down from the ear, my dress caught on a bolt in the car, as well as I remember, and I well remember the bell rung for the car to start, and then I didn’t remember anything about it until after I had gotten upon my feet after I was hurt. No; I had just started to make one step when my dress had caught, one foot was just inside the car. Q. One foot was out, just making the step, and the other part of your ■body was in the car? A. Yes, sir. Q. Then in this case you were stepping just out of the ear, and your right foot was out? A. Yes, sir. Q. And the car gave a lurch forward and you were thrown forward on your face? A. Yes, sir. Q. Do you recall what your dress caught on ? A. As to that, I cannot say, but my dress caught on something. Q. Did you disengage your dress yourself? A. Why, no; when I was thrown from the car, I guess it must have torn loose some way. Q. Your dress was caught on the ear and holding,you back, and would it not be natural for you to lean around and disengage your dress? A. I don’t think so unless I had hád my foot on the car. If I had had my foot on the car, I might have loosened the dress. Q. Where were your feet? [391]*391A. I was just stepping oil the ear. Q. Then he stopped, and you immediately went to get off, and your dress caught, and the car immediately started across the street. Is that true? A. Yes, sir.”

Witnesses Toller and Gregg in their testimony corroborated the appellee to some extent, the latter stating:

“I noticed her skirt was caught, and just at that time he started the car, and of course he didn’t have to move very far; the pull of the skirt could have throwed her off — pull her feet out from under her. I know her skirt was caught on something on the car. ’ ’

This testimony, if believed, showed that just as plaintiff was in the act of alighting her skirt caught on something and before she could disengage herself, and before she had alighted, the car suddenly started, throwing her to the pavement.

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Bluebook (online)
181 P. 379, 20 Ariz. 386, 1919 Ariz. LEXIS 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phoenix-railway-co-v-beals-ariz-1919.