Whitworth v. Columbia, Newberry & Laurens Railroad

85 S.E. 402, 101 S.C. 213, 1915 S.C. LEXIS 108
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMay 27, 1915
Docket9115
StatusPublished

This text of 85 S.E. 402 (Whitworth v. Columbia, Newberry & Laurens Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitworth v. Columbia, Newberry & Laurens Railroad, 85 S.E. 402, 101 S.C. 213, 1915 S.C. LEXIS 108 (S.C. 1915).

Opinion

"Hie opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Hydrick.

This appeal is from a judgment for $5,000.00 damages for injuries sustained by plaintiff while alighting from one of defendant’s trains on which she was a passenger from Columbia to Ballentine, a flag station on defendant’s road.

. The specifications of negligence are: 1. In stopping the train before it reached the regular stopping place, in inviting plaintiff to alight where the train was stopped, which was not a safe place, because the ground was 'rough and the distance from the step to the ground was too great for plaintiff to alight in safety, without the aid of'a stool, which was not furnished, and without light to enable her to see how to get off, which was not provided. 2. In causing the train to be moved forward with a sudden jerk, while plaintiff was in the act .of getting off, and before sufficient time had been allowed for her to get off.

Defendant denied the allegation of negligence, and charged plaintiff with contributory negligence in getting off on the wrong side of the train, where no landing had been provided, when she knew there was a suitable landing on the other side, where the conductor and porter attended with their lanterns to assist passengers in getting off.

The proof showed that defendant had provided a suitable landing for the distance required by statute on each side of the umbrella shed, which was on the right going from *216 Columbia to Ballentine, and it tended to show that it extended as far as the end of the car where plaintiff got off. But she got off on the opposite side, though she got on the train that morning going to Columbia from the landing on the side next to the shed.

There were twenty or more passengers on the train that night for Ballentine. The station blow and stop signals were given, and the porter called the station. When the train stopped, Mr. Shealy, who was in the car with plaintiff, suggested that, as there was a large crowd to get off, they go to the rear end of the car and get off, and thereby avoid the rush. Accordingly, he and his wife, son and daughter, plaintiff’s sister and her husband, and plaintiff went to the rear of the coach, plaintiff being next to the last, her sister being last. The testimony tends to show that they went out promptly; that those in front got out safely, but just as plaintiff was on the bottom step,, in the act of stepping off, the car was moved forward with a sudden jerk, and she had to jump to keep from being thrown down; that Mr. Shealy, who was assisting her off, caught her in time to keep her from falling and she landed on her feet, but the sudden jar caused the injuries of which she complained. Her sister testified that she was standing in the door of the car, and that the jerk was so sudden and violent that it nearly threw her out of the car. She failed to get off and was carried on to the next station, and returned to Ballentine on the next train.

The conductor and porter were on the opposite side. The conductor said that he saw passengers get off all along on that side, and that, as sufficient time had been allowed for all to get off, and none were getting off on his side, he sig-nalled the train forward.

There was evidence that, at Ballentine, it was customary for passengers to get on and off the train on either side, and that this was done with the knowledge and acquiescence of the company. Some of the witnesses said they had seen *217 as many get on and off on one side as on the other, and one or two testified that they had seen the conductors help ladies off on the side on which plaintiff got off.

1 It is clear from the foregoing statement that the tendencies of the evidence, that defendant’s motion for a directed verdict was properly refused. The Court could not have held, as matter of law, that the train stopped a sufficient length of time for all the passengers, exercising due diligence, to get off safely. -Nor could the Court have held that there was no evidence of negligence on the part of the conductor in signalling the train forward, under the circumstances, or on the part of the engineer, in moving it with a sudden jerk. Considering all the circumstances, — the unusual number to get off, of which the conductor had notice, for he had taken up their tickets, the custom of passengers getting on and off on both sides at that station, which the engineer said he had observed daily, and of which the conductor did not deny knowledge, but, on the contrary, admitted that, on that occasion, he thought they were getting off on both sides, and he did not observe .closely, and could not give even an approximate estimate of the number that got off on his side, the fact that it was in the night and at a flag station, where there was little or no light, except that afforded by the lanterns of the.trainmen and the lights in the cars, and the evidence that the six persons with plaintiff, moving with reasonable promptness and celerity, were not all able to get off before the train was started, and the evidence that it was started with a violent jerk, the issue of negligence was properly submitted to the jury.

2 Nor could the Court have held, as matter of law, that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in getting off on the wrong side. What has been said with reference to the custom of the passengers getting on and off on both sides, with the knowledge and acquiescence of . the company, applies to this contention. While there *218 was no evidence of a direct or special invitation to get off on that side, the Court properly left it to the jury to say whether an implied invitation to do so should be inferred from the circumstances, just as the constant and long continued use of the track as a walkway, with the knowledge and acquiescence of the company, may warrant the inference of an invitation to so use it. DuBose v. R. R. Co., 81 S. C. 271, 62 S. E. 255.

The remaining exceptions complain of alleged errors in the charge, which is too long tó report in full. But when it is considered as a whole, it was not erroneous or misleading.

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Related

Dubose v. Railroad Co.
62 S.E. 255 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1908)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 S.E. 402, 101 S.C. 213, 1915 S.C. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitworth-v-columbia-newberry-laurens-railroad-sc-1915.