The plaintiff purchased of the defendant a ticket entitling her to passage over the latter’s line from "Weatherby to Gallatin Junction. The petition alleges that when the train on which plaintiff took passage arrived at Gallatin Junction, the defendant neglected to announce the fact and neglected to stop its said train thereat, so as to enable her to get off, but negligently carried her by said station the distance of half a mile, when, against her protestations, she was forcibly put off the defendant’s train, from where, through the darkness, she was compelled to walk back on defendant’s railway track and over a long and dangerous trestle; by reason of being so carried by said station and put off said train in. said darkness and having .to cross said dangerous trestle and walk back to said station she was greatly frightened and worried and overtaxed, and thereby made sick and confined to her bed for a period of two weeks .and was caused great mental and physical suffering and was thereby greatly humiliated, to her damage, etc.
*156There was a trial and judgment in favor of plaintiff for $500, and from which the defendant appealed. The principal ground up on which the defendant by its appeal assails the judgment is that the trial court erred in its action in the giving and refusing of instructions.
Passenger carriers: stopping at station: assistance to passenger. The law is quite well settled in this state to the effect that it is the duty of a carrier to stop long enough at its stations to enable its passengers, by the use of ordinary care and diligence, to enter or leave its cars, Hanks v. Railway, 60 Mo. App. 274; Culberson v. Railway, 50 Mo. App. 556; Straus v. Railway, 75 Mo. 185; Smith v. Railway, 108 Mo. 243. It is not ordinarily the duty of the employees of the carrier to assist its passengers in entering or leaving its cars. If the egress or ingress is easy assistepice can not be claimed by the passenger as a matter of right. Yarnell v. Railway, 113 Mo. 570; Hanks v. Railway, ante. But if the passenger is sick, infirm,' blind, or aged, and known to the carrier to be ’ so, he is entitled to more care and attention than one who is under no such disability as to the time allowed or the assistance to be rendered in entering or leaving the carrier’s train. Hanks v. Railway, ante, and authorities there cited.
No fact is alleged or shown by the evidence bringing the plaintiff within any one of the exceptions just mentioned. The implied duty which the defendant owed the plaintiff was no more than that required of carriers by the general rule in relation to the assistance to be given passengers in entering or leaving a train. The defendant was under no duty to plaintiff to discharge her safely at the platform of the station at the end of the transit. It was only required to stop its train at the station where the plaintiff’s transit ended a sufficient length of time to enable plaintiff, by the use of ordinary care and diligence, to leave the same.
*157—:—:—: instruction. *156The court in its first instruction given at the request of the plaintiff told the jury that'if the plaintiff purchased a *157ticket of defendant entitling her to passage on defendant’s train from Weatherby to Gallatin Junction, then it became defendant’s duty to well and safely carry her from the former to the latter of said stations and “to discharge her safely at the platform" or at “some other reasonably safe place" at such latter station. The italicized words of this instruction were misleading. The jury might very well have thought, and no doubt did think, that it was the duty of the defendant’s 'employees, in charge of the train on which the plaintiff took passage, to assist her with her children and valises in leaving the train, when the law imposed no such duty. The jury may have concluded that the injuries complained of were the result of a breach by defendant of this duty.
It follows from these observations that the plaintiff’s second instruction, which told the jury, amongst other things, that if the defendant failed to stop at the station of plaintiff’s destination and to discharge her safely, etc., there was liability, was likewise erroneous in expression.
—: damages: mental suffering. The defendant further objects that the plaintiff’s second and third instructions authorized the jury, in assessing the plaintiff’s actual damages, to take into consideration elements of “mental suffering,” fright, etc. These elements of damage are included in the claim m§de by the plaintiff in her petition. Whether fright is a mental condition or a condition of the nerves superinduced by that of the mind we need not stop to inquire. There was no evidence adduced tending to prove that the plaintiff suffered any physical injury at the hands of the defendant’s employees. The term “physical injury” is the synonym of “bodily harm” or “bodily hurt.” There must be some tortious act on the part of the employees of the defendant by which the physical injury is occasioned, in order to justify damages for mental suffering and fright. It is held here and elsewhere that there can be no recovery in any ease of mental *158distress or fright resulting from negligence where there is no bodily injury contemporaneous therewith. The general rule is that mental anguish when connected with bodily injury is the subject of damages, but it must be so connected in order to be included in the estimate of damages, unless the injury is accompanied by circumstances of malice, insult or inhumanity. Trigg v. Railway, 74 Mo. 147; Connell v. Telegraph Co., 116 Mo. 34; Strange v. Railway, 61 Mo. App. 587; Am. and Eng. Ency. of Law [2 Ed.], 666 and cases cited in note 1.
It is true the evidence tends to prove that the plaintiff’s sickness was the result of the fright, worry and over-taxation of strength occasioned by the defendant’s negligence, but this was not a contemporaneous physical injury within the meaning of the rule allowing damages for fright and mental suffering, when connected with a physical injury. None of the cases to which the plaintiff refers lend support to her contention that sickness so resulting is a “physical injury” within the meaning of the rule of liability just referred to. ' There is nothing shown by the evidence in the case to justify the court in instructing the jury that if they found for plaintiff they might allow her damages for mental suffering and fright, and in so doing it committed error.
—: stopping at station: action: damages. In respect to the defendant’s instruction in the nature of a demurrer, it is needless to say that the evidence disclosed by the record was ample to make out a prima facie case entitling the plaintiff to a submission to the jury. * ¶ . ' If the defendant did no-t stop its tram at the station of plaintiff’s destination, or if, in doing so, it did not stop a sufficient length of time to afford plaintiff a reasonable opportunity to leave the same, or if it stopped the car, -in which plaintiff took passage, at a place where it was dangerous or inconvenient for her to leave the car, defendant was guilty of such a breach of duty as to render it liable for any damages resulting to the plaintiff therefrom. Eichorn v. Railway, 130 Mo. 575. If the testimony of plaintiff is to be *159believed she i§ certainly entitled to recover tbe amount of damages awarded to ber by the jury in the case. Tbe amount is not excessive.
On account of tbe error of tbe court in giving tbe plaintiff’s instruction we must reverse tbe judgment and remand tbe cause.
All concur.