Court Opinion

ID: 7366779
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-27 23:52:25.561602+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:20:47.415797
License: Public Domain

SAYRE, J.
— Appellee sued as a passenger for damages for that defendant carried her beyond her agreed stopping place. The complaint averred that the defendant “negligently failed or refused to stop said train at Graces a sufficient length of time for the plaintiff to alight while the train was not in motion.” Defendant demurred to the complaint as exacting too much of it. It is said that there should have been an averment that plaintiff had not time to alight, using reasonable diligence. We think the pleading fairly and sufficiently warned defendant of the cause and character of the complaint it was called upon to answer. Defendant negligently failed or refused to allow plaintiff a sufficient time to alight. The rule is to construe pleadings against the pleader on demurrer, but that is a reasonable rule and does not allow strained constructions in order that a pleading be condemned. It does not require us to treat the complaint in this case as laying upon defendant the duty to hold its train at its stopping place while plaintiff slept, chatted with other passengers, or loitered on the way, before exercising herself to get off. It is no erroneous statement to say that a carrier’s duty is to stop its train long enough for passengers to get off at their agreed stopping places. That length of time may in cases depend upon peculiar circumstances, but in general it is such as passengers, using reasonable diligence, require. Great generality is allowed in the statement of negligence as a cause of action. It was not necessary for the plaintiff to characterize her own conduct, but that of defendant, and *206this the complaint in its final shape (count 3 as amended) did, in a way which left no room for misapprehension on the part of defendant, when it charged that defendant negligently failed or refused to stop its train a sufficient length of time for plaintiff to alight. It might with much propriety have said “a reasonable time under the circumstances,” or “a sufficient time for plaintiff, exercising reasonable diligence, to alight,” as defendant suggests, but the allegation in either of those shapes would have been no less a conclusion, nor can we think it would have further illuminated defendants understanding of the cause of complaint. Without dwelling too long on the point, we state our opinion that the complaint was not objectionable.
Plaintiff’s husband was traveling with her and testified for her. His testimony was that the train made a very short stop and that, owing to the aisle of the car being crowded, he was unable to get his wife, child, and luggage off the train. He was allowed to testify, over defendant’s objection, that when he found the flagman a few minutes after the train had moved away from the station the following conversation passed between them: “I asked him why he did not stop the train long enough for me to get off, and he said he did, and I told him we did not have time to get off, and I asked him then to back the train so we could get off, and he said he did not have time.” This was not of the res gestae of the negligence complained of, was a narrative by the par-, ties to the conversation, and from their respective viewpoints of a transaction then past was hearsay and should not have been allowed. Defendant’s motion to exclude should have been granted. — Mobile Company v. Baker, 158 Ala. 495, 48 South. 119, and cases cited. Nor do we think, on reconsideration, that the judgment can be saved from reversal on the ground that this ruling *207had no prejudicial effect upon defendant’s case. Very clearly plaintiff, by a part of this testimony, sought to sustain and re-enforce the testimony of her witness on the the only material point of dispute in the case by showing that shortly after the transaction in question he made a statement of what had happened, which statement was in accord with his testimony at the trial. We cannot know what effect this testimony may have had on the jury. The point at issue was material. The testimony was incompetent and illegal. — Mobile Light Co. v. Baker, 158 Ala. 495, 48 South. 119; M. & C. R. R. Co. v. Womack, 84 Ala. 150, 4 South. 618; A. G. S. R. R. v. Hawk, 72 Ala. 112, 47 Am. Rep. 403. It is well settled by the more recent decisions of this court that in civil causes the appellate court, if it would avoid a reversal for error shown, must be able to point to something in the record which clearly and satisfactorily shows that no injury resulted. — Donovan v. S. & N. R. R. Co., 79 Ala. 431. In its early history this court followed the rule that a cause must be reversed for error shown unless it appeared from the record that it was “impossible that injury could have accrued to the party against whom the error was committed” or, it was otherwise stated, unless it appeared “beyond a reasonable doubt that injury did not result from error.” — Pinkston v. Greene, 9 Ala. 23; Hagerthy v. Bradford, 9 Ala. 571. Until a statute was passed, which had some effect to the contrary, this court declined absolutely to apply the doctrine of error without injury to questions arising in prosecutions for crime. — Mitchell v. State, 60 Ala. 26; Maxwell v. State, 89, Ala. 164, 7 South. 824; Chief Justice Stone said in Vaughan v. State, 83 Ala. 57, 3 South. 530, that it would be a hazardous precedent to establish the doctrine in such cases. The hazard he had in mind must attend a total destruction of the doctrine *208of presumed injury in any class of cases; but we do not doubt that the modification of the rule stated in Donovan’s Case, supra, was based upon sound reason. The modified rule has been consistently and repeatedly followed. — Calloway v. Truitt, 143 Ala. 528, 39 South. 277, and cases there cited. It is the settled law of this state. The universality of its acceptance by the courts of the country would seem argument enough in favor of both its propriety and necessity as a rule of decision. Applied to this case, it means that there was injury, reversible error, in the ruling under consideration, for we cannot see clearly or satisfactorily that the evidence erroneously admitted had no effect upon the minds of the jury nor what its effect was. For this error the judgment will be reversed.
Proof that defendant was accustomed to put a step on the ground at plaintiff’s station in order to assist passengers in alighting, in connection with proof that on the occasion in question observance of the rule or custom was omitted, would tend in some slight degree to confirm plaintiff’s theory of undue haste in the operation of the train. At any rate, the court’s subsequent action took this evidence out of the case, and error cannot be predicated of its admission.
The court in its oral charge said to the jury, in connection with an approved definition of negligence: “You would have to believe from the averments of this [meaning the complaint] that the defendant company negligently failed to stop long enough for the plaintiff to get off in safety.” Defendant excepted. In connection with an assignment of error based upon this exception the argument as to the demurrer to the complaint is repeated. It may be that the excerpt from the charge does not contain a comprehensive statement of the law of the case. No doubt further definition of defendant’s *209•duty in the premises, as measured by the time required for plaintiff, in the exercise of reasonable diligence, to alight, would have been serviceable with the jury. But that it was erroneous cannot be said.
Reversed and remanded. All the Justices concur, except Dowdell, C. J., not sitting.