Madden v. Port Royal &c. Railway Co.
Madden v. Port Royal &c. Railway Co.
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This case has been in this court before. See Madden v. Railway Company, 35 S. C., 382. When the case went back, the plaintiff was allowed to amend her complaint; and alleged as follows:
“I. That the defendant, the Port Royal and Western Carolina Railway Company, is a body politic and corporate under the laws of the State of South Carolina, and is competent to sue and be sued in this State; that it owns property and operates Gains within the limits of this State. II. That said defendant is, and was at the time hereinafter stated, a common carrier of passengers thereupon for hire between the places hereinafter mentioned, to wit: Laurens Court House, South Carolina, and High Point, South Carolina. III. That on April 29, 1890, the defendant received the plaintiff iuto one of its passenger cars, for the purpose of carrying her therein and upon said railroad, as a passenger from Laurens Court House to High Point, in said county and State, for the sum of forty-five cents, paid to the defendant by the plaintiff. IV. That*451 it was the duty of the defendant, common carrier, to have a suitable stopping place at the station at High Point, and to provide a foot-stool at the steps of said car for the use of passengers alighting from said train. V. That at the time aforesaid the defendant, in carrying the said plaintiff as passenger, negligently failed to stop its train at the usual stopping place at High Point, but stopped some distance from said usual stopping place, at a point where the distance from the steps of said train to the ground was considerable and unsafe, the said defendant well knowing that the said plaintiff was a lady in delicate health, and that it was dangerous for'said plaintiff to alight from the train without the use of the foot-stool, which was not there provided for her, although it was the duty and custom of the defendant so to provide, and defendant’s servants then and there instructed her to alight from said train. VI. That in consequence of the negligence of the defendant as aforesaid, and in consequence of said train stopping only a short time, the plaintiff, at said time and place, in alighting from said train to the ground (in pursuance of said instructions) a considerable distance, and in so doing was injured in her person by the displacement of her womb, and by the formation of a large abscess behind the bowels, as well as in other respects, and that her said injuries are of a permanent character. VII. That by reason thereof, the plaintiff became for a long time ill, and was obliged to engage a skilled physician,' and is still under medical treatment, and was prevented from attending to her duties, and was made sick, sore, lame, and disabled, and was otherwise injured, to her damage ten thousand dollars, &c., $10,000.”
The defendant company interposed a general denial,- and for “a second defence alleges that the plaintiff, if injured at all, was injured solely by reason of her own negligence, in that plaintiff, having full knowledge of her own physical condition, and having full knowledge of the character of the place where plaintiff alighted from the cars of defendant, and having full knowledge of the danger of so alighting, nevertheless voluntarily alighted in such place, and while in such delicate condition, without any compulsion on the part of defendant or any of its servants.
The cause came on to be heard by Judge Norton and a jury. The. testimony is all in the record. . The defendant made many requests to charge. The judge made a full and careful charge — • first, on the law of the whole case, as if there had been no requests, and then second, taking up the requests, some of which he charged, others with modifications, and still others he refused — those which he had already charged, or assumed the existence of facts foreign to the case. The jury found for the plaintiff $5,000. The defendant made a motion for a new trial on the minutes of the court, which being refused, they now appeal to this court upon numerous exceptions (forty in number), alleging errors of law in charging, refusing to charge, and in statements and rulings of the court. The exceptions are not only numerous, but long and argumentative — consisting largely of extracts, detached from the contexts of the charge, and covering more than ten printed pages of the record; so that it is utterly impossible, within reasonable compass, to consider them seriatim; but we will endeavor to consider all the real points made, by grouping the exceptions in something like what seems to be their natural order.
Exceptions 1, 2, 5, 6, 7,15,17, and 18, grouped in appellant’s argument here as “Class I.,” make objections to those parts of the chai'ge in which, as alleged, the judge failed to represent correctly to the jury the issues to be tried by them.
The judgment of this court is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- MADDEN v. PORT ROYAL &c. RAILWAY CO.
- Cited By
- 4 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Charging Juries. — In determining whether error has been committed in charging a jury, the charge must be considered as a whole. 2. Ibid. — Passengers—Stations.—In charging the jury, the trial judge did not err in stating the case as made by the pleadings, rather than as made by the proof, especially as the difference between “providing a suitable stopping place for passengers,” and carrying a passenger beyond the suitable place proyided, is not material. 3. Ibid. — Misnomer of Defence.. — In alluding to the defence of contributory negligence as a counter-claim, the trial judge was technically in error in . his charge, but his meaning was clear, and no harm was done. 4. Tbid. — Admissions.—In charging as to “disputes,” “allegations,” and “admissions,” no error was committed, such charge being in accordance with the declarations of counsel as made in argument, though not sustained by the pleadings. 5. Negligence — Doties op Carrier — Court and Jury. — Negligence is a mixed question of law and fact. The judge should declare what is negligence, and leave it to the jury to say whether the facts make negligence as thus defined; but it is also-proper for the judge to state to the jury, as matter of law, what are the duties of a common carrier towards its passengers. 6. Common Carriers — Assisting Passengers — Case Criticised. — Where a passenger on a railroad train is suffering from a physical infirmity, known to the conductor, which requires special assistance in getting off of the train at her destination, it is the duty of the carrier to render such assistance. This case distinguished from Renneker w. South Carolina Railway Company, 20 S. C., 222. 7. Ibid. — Ibid.—Recollection.—If a conductor has been told of the physical infirmity of a passenger, the railroad company is chargeable with knowledge of her condition, if the conductor remembered the information; whether he did so remember, was properly left to the jury. 8. Issues — Charging Juries. — There being no allegations in the pleadings that the wrong party was sued, there was no error in charging the jury that they were to say whether the defendant was the company that sold the ticket to plaintiff, and operated the train on which she was carried. 9. Evidence — Charging Juries. — In charging that the defendant must establish contributory negligence by the preponderance of the evidence, the judge did not exclude from the consideration of the jury the testimony of the plaintiff as to facts bearing on this defence. 10. Contributory Negligence. — In charging: “Of course, if you think it was negligence in her not to have, under the circumstances, seen the absence of the stool, and that she was not hindered from seeing it by her skirts, as she says she was, but went recklessly along — I will not say ‘recklessly,’ because that implies gross negligence — but went negligently along, and took her step without making any observation at all, then she would be guilty of contributory negligence” — the judge committed no error of which defendant can complain. 11. Charging Juries — Pacts.—In a law case, the judge cannot charge on the facts. 12. Ibid. — There was no error in neglecting to charge a correct proposition of law, elsewhere charged to the jury. 13. Petition for Rehearing refused.