Western Railway of Alabama v. Brown

196 So. 2d 392, 280 Ala. 543, 1967 Ala. LEXIS 827
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 23, 1967
Docket5 Div. 793
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 196 So. 2d 392 (Western Railway of Alabama v. Brown) 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
Western Railway of Alabama v. Brown, 196 So. 2d 392, 280 Ala. 543, 1967 Ala. LEXIS 827 (Ala. 1967).

Opinion

COLEMAN, Justice.

Defendant appeals from a judgment for plaintiff in an action for personal injury allegedly suffered by plaintiff when she got off defendant’s train on which she had been riding as a passenger.

Defendant argues in support of nineteen grounds for reversal.

1.

Defendant says the judgment should be be reversed because the court erred in refusing affirmative charges requested in writing by defendant. Defendant says it was entitled to such charges for three different reasons, first, because the proof failed to sustain the allegations of the complaint.

*548 The complaint contained two counts. In Count One, plaintiff alleges that defendant was operating trains between Mobile and Opelika and was a common carrier of passengers for hire; that plaintiff bought a ticket at Mobile to be carried on defendant’s train from Mobile to Opelika and became a passenger on defendant’s train; that when the train reached Opelika, as plaintiff attempted to get off, she fell and suffered the injuries complained of. Count One concludes :

“Plaintiff alleges that all of her injuries and damages were caused as a direct and proximate result of the negligence of the defendant in negligently failing to provide the Plaintiff with a stool or box on which to alight from its said train when such was necessary by reason of the unreasonably high distance from said train to the ground.”

Count Two is substantially the same as Count One except for the concluding paragraph of Count Two which is as follows:

“Plaintiff alleges that all of her injuries and damages were caused as a direct and proximate result of the negligence of the defendants (sic) in negligently failing to warn or give notice to the Plaintiff that there was no stool or box on which the Plaintiff could alight when such was necessary by reason of the unreasonably high distance from said train to the ground.”

Defendant says that, by specifically averring the particulars which constituted defendant’s negligence, plaintiff made the distance between the train and the ground a material issue in the case, that defendant was not negligent under either count unless the train was an unreasonably high distance from the ground, that plaintiff failed to adduce any evidence of the distance between the train and the ground, and, therefore, that plaintiff failed to prove a material averment of the complaint and defendant was entitled to the affirmative charge.

Defendant says plaintiff’s evidence did not tend to establish anything more than the “distance from the last step to the ground or to a concrete paved portion (sic),” and that plaintiff did not offer any evidence of the height of “the train itself” off the ground. Defendant says that “evidence tending to establish the distance from the last step or the distance from some undetermined place on the steps to the ground or to the concrete portion (sic) furnishes no proof whatsoever of the height of the train from the ground.” Defendant says further that the uncontradicted testimony of defendant’s witness Williams shows that the distance of the train itself from the ground is only seven inches, which is the height of the rail and the tire plate.

It is elementary that the burden is upon the plaintiff to prove her complaint where the general issue is pleaded. Calvert Fire Insurance Co. v. Phillips, 41 Ala. App. 610, 145 So.2d 848; Central of Georgia Railway Co. v. Gross, 192 Ala. 354, 68 So. 291.

When a count contains several averments, all of which combined together make up the one cause of action averred, it is necessary to prove each of the averments in order to sustain the cause of action as laid. Birmingham Railway & Electric Co. v. Baylor, 101 Ala. 488, 13 So. 793; Mazer v. Brown, 259 Ala. 449, 66 So.2d 561.

Counts One and Two each state a single cause of action. The allegations are that plaintiff was a passenger on defendant’s train and that she attempted to get off the train at her destination. These allegations show that defendant owed plaintiff a duty.

The duty of the carrier is to exercise due care in providing reasonably safe and convenient means for the assistance and protection of passengers in getting on and off its cars. Central of Georgia Ry. Co. v. Carlisle, 2 Ala.App. 514, 56 So. 737; Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. Farmer, 201 Ala. 603, 79 So. 35.

*549 In the absence of circumstances rendering such assistance necessary, a carrier is not required to furnish a boarding or alighting passenger with a portable box or footstool, but, where the car step is unreasonably high, the carrier should furnish a box or footstool to facilitate the boarding or alighting of a passenger and should exercise due care to see that such box or stool is in a safe condition and is placed or used by its employees in a safe manner. Where the lowest car step is not higher above the ground than is usual for other vehicles from which people safely alight without such assistance, it has been held that a footstool need not be provided. Farmer’s case, supra.

In the case at bar, plaintiff undertook to allege that her injuries were the proximate result of defendant’s negligence in failing to provide a stool or box on which plaintiff could alight from the train. Plaintiff also undertook to state that defendant owed a duty to furnish a stool or box by alleging that a stool or box “was necessary by reason of the unreasonably high distance from said train to the ground.” The allegation of “the unreasonably high distance from said train to the ground” is one of the bundle of allegations necessary to show that defendant owed plaintiff a duty to provide a footstool, and, if plaintiff failed to offer any evidence which will support a finding that there was such an unreasonably high distance from train to ground as to require a footstool, plaintiff failed to offer sufficient proof to sustain the cause of action as laid and the court erred in refusing the affirmative charges requested by defendant.

Plaintiff testified that the baggage man was helping her “down the steps, and I don’t know, I just fell. I wasn’t even thinking it was so far from the ground and the first thing I knew I just went down. It was 28 inches—” She testified further that there was no stool or box “between the last step and the ground.” In answer to a question asking for her best judgment of the distance “from the last step on the railroad car to the ground or the concrete platform on the occasion of the accident,” plaintiff said: “Well, it was a long ways. I know it must have been almost three feet.” We think this evidence sufficient to support a finding that the distance from the last step on the car to the ground was so unreasonably high as to place on defendant the duty of providing a box or stool on which plaintiff could safely alight. Defendant argues, however, that proof of the distance from the last step on the car to the ground is not proof of the distance from “said train” to the ground.

We do not agree. Every person who has seen a railroad train, such as is commonly used to haul passengers, knows that the train travels on rails less than a foot high.

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Bluebook (online)
196 So. 2d 392, 280 Ala. 543, 1967 Ala. LEXIS 827, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-railway-of-alabama-v-brown-ala-1967.