Watkins v. Birmingham Railway & Electric Co.

120 Ala. 147
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 120 Ala. 147 (Watkins v. Birmingham Railway & Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watkins v. Birmingham Railway & Electric Co., 120 Ala. 147 (Ala. 1897).

Opinion

BRICKELL, C. J.

Appellant was a passenger on a train operated by appellee on its “East Lake Dummy Lime” between East Lake and Birmingham’; haying boarded the train at Woodlawn to ride to Twenty-fourth street in Birmingham. At the time he paid his fare he told the conductor he desired to get off at Twenty-fourth street, and ■. when the train was between Twenty-fifth and Twenty-fourth streets he left his seat in the rear car and, went out to the back platform, and as .the train slowed up for the west crossing, which was the proper side of the street on which to stop, and after the engine and front car had passed over the crossing, and while the rear car was passing over it at a speed of about three miles an hour, he got on the lower step on the south side of the platform preparatory to stepping off, when the speed of the train was suddenly increased, and he fell to the ground, sustaining the injuries complained of, and for which he seeks to recover in this action, [151]*151There are two tendencies of the evidence with respect both to the position of the plaintiff on the step and the' manner in which he fell therefrom. Plaintiff testifies that he ‘ 'got down on the step with his face to the south, with his right hand hold of the guard, ready to get off,” and that while “in that position and ready to get off when the car should stop, the car, instead of stopping, jerked forward suddenly and threw plaintiff down ;” and the inference from this testimony is, that plaintiff’s position on the step was the position ordinarily assumed by one about to step off a car, with his back to the car and his right hand grasping the front guard, and that he was not in the act of stepping off when the car suddenly “jerked forward.” One of the inferences deducible from the testimony of the only other witness in the case was, that plaintiff was standing on the step with his back to the street, his right hand grasping the rear guard, and his left hand the front guard, and that he was in the act of stepping off backwards when the speed of the car was suddenly increased. The witness testified : “Plaintiff was standing on the lower step of the platform, and as soon as it started up he stepped off. I could not tell positively whether he stepped off or was jerked off. He was standing in a position to step off, and I could not say he was jerked off. He was standing with his right hand hold of the rear guard and his left hand hold of the front guard at the. time the train started up, and the next instant he was off. When he touched the ground he was in a falling position, and took two or three steps and fell. As his feet struck the ground his left hand became disengaged from the car.” The instructions to the jury, given at the request of the defendant, assume that the conduct of the plaintiff, as shown by the above statement of facts, constituted negligence per se, and the correctness of this proposition is the principal question presented for consideration. The trial court charged, upon request of the respective parties, that each was guilty of negligence, and the only question left to the jury was, therefore, whether the plaintiff’s negligence contributed proximately to his injury.

While there are some cases which hold that the act of a passenger in voluntarily leaving a car while it is in [152]*152motion constitutes contributory negligence, the better doctrine, and that sustained by the great weight of authority, is that-such conduct on the part of the passenger is not negligence per se. There may be, it is true, exceptional circumstances attending the attempt thus to alight, such as the great speed of the train, the age or infirmity of the passenger, or his being encumbered with bundles or children, or other facts which render the attempt so obviously dangerous that the court may, where the testimony is undisputed, declare as matter of law that the passenger’s conduct was reckless andnegligent. But ordinarily it. is for the jury to.say whether he acted as a reasonably cautious and prudent man would act under like circumstances. —Booth on Street Railways, § 345 ; Beach on Contrib. Neg., (1st ed.), § 90; 2 Wood on Railways, (1st ed.) § 305, p. 1129, et seq.; 5 Am. & Eng. Encyc. of Law, (2d ed.), 664; Bishop on Non-Contract Law, § 1101; Eppendorf v. Brooklyn, etc., R. R. Co., 69 N. Y. 195; Medler v. Atlantic Ave. R. R. Co. (N. Y.), 6 Am. Neg. Case, affirmed in 126 N. Y. 669; Morrison v. Erie R’y Co., 56 N. Y. 302; Nichols v. Sixth Ave. R. R. Co., 38 N. Y. 131; Washington, etc., R. R. Co. v. Harmon, 147 U. S. 571; Fleck v. Un. R. R. Co., 134 Mass. 480; Doss v. Railroad Co., 59 Mo. 37; Schacherl v. St. P. City R’y Co., 42 Minn. 42; Nance v. Carolina Cent. R. R. Co., 94 N. C. 619; Bowie v. Greenville St. R’y Co., 69 Miss. 196. This doctrine is not in conflict with any of the previous adjudications of this court. In Ricketts v. Birmingham St. R’y Co., 85 Ala. 604, the proposition is stated in general terms that ‘ ‘stepping from a car, without necessity, when injury is caused thereby, which could have been avoided by remaining on the car — by the exercise of ordinary care — is negligence which will defeat a recovery because of prior negligence of the agents or servants of the company.” But in a subsequent case it was -said : ‘ ‘This general observation had reference to a charge instructing the jury that plaintiff was. not entitled to recover, if he was standing on the steps in front of the car, with a keg of lead in his hands, and undertook to step off while it was in motion, and such act was not that of an ordinarily prudent man.” Central R. & B. Co.v. Miles, 88 Ala. 260. It was further [153]*153said, in this last mentioned case : “When the material facts are disputed, or, if clearly established, different inferences may be reasonably drawn therefrom, contributory negligence is a question of fact exclusively within the province of the jury. This general rule is as applicable to the act of getting off a car in motion, as to other eases, unless the court is prepared to lay down an inexorable rule that, except in the well settled instance of leaping under the impulse of alarm, excited by sudden exposure to great peril, to alight from a moving car is negligence in all cases and under any circumstances.” This case expressly recognizes the doctrine that it is not negligence in law for a passenger to attempt to alight from a train moving so slowly that to alight therefrom would not appear dangerous to a man of ordinary prudence ; but that ordinarily the question of negligence vel non should be submitted to the jury, (p.263.) And the doctrine was again recognized in a still later case, in which it was held that a request to charge the jury that “it is negligence for a person to attempt to board a moving train, and if he be injured by such attempt, he cannot recover,” was projDerly refused; the court saying: “We would not say, as a matter of law, that it is contributory negligence, under all circumstances and conditions, to attempt to board a train if moving.” Birmingham Elec. R’y Co. v. Clay, 108 Ala. 233. To board a moving car cannot be said to be more dangerous than to alight from one.

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120 Ala. 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watkins-v-birmingham-railway-electric-co-ala-1897.