— This is an action to recover damages for injuries received on account of the negligence of the defendant.
The particular negligence pleaded and on which plaintiff relied for a recovery was that she was a passenger on one of defendant’s trains, and that at the station of her destination defendant neglected to place a portable step on the platform at said station so that she could easily and safely alight from the steps of the ear in which she was riding, onto the station platform, and that while in the exercise of due care under the conditions and circumstances aforesaid she attempted to alight from the steps of said car onto said platform, which former was twenty-four inches above the latter, but that owing to the neglect of the defendant to have a portable step as aforesaid, she struck the said platform in such manner as to break the bones and tendons of her right ankle, etc.
There was a trial, and at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence and at that of all the evidence, the defendant unsuccessfully demurred thereto, and these rulings of the court are *272made tbe basis of tbe first ground of error assigned for a reversal of the judgment.
Adverting to tbe evidence presented by tbe record, we find it there appears that tbe plaintiff was a lady about thirty-eight years of age, and that ber right ankle bad from ber childhood been weak, slightly crooked and occasionally bad turned when a misstep bad been made by ber. And this, according to tbe expert testimony given, bad tbe effect to increase ber liability to accident. It further appears that she weighed one hundred and thirty-eight- pounds, and carried in ber arms a child weighing twenty pounds. She bad ridden in a chair car until tbe train bad approached near tbe station, when tbe conductor told ber that tbe train would have to wait for another train and that ber car would'not pull up to the station for half an hour, and to go into the next ear— tbe smoker — as it was going then right- up to tbe platform. She then left her seat and went into the next car as directed.
When tbe smoker got nearly opposite tbe platform tbe train porter inquired for ber baggage, and she showed it to him. He then further inquired “if that was all,” when ber sister, who accompanied ber, said to him, “Yes; it is all but our babies, which we would like to have you help us off with,” and to which be replied “all right.” Tbe porter then went out of tbe car taking tbe baggage with him. When tbe train came to a full stop tbe plaintiff and sister left tbe car and when plaintiff, with her baby in ber arms, reached tbe last step, tbe conductor, with bis lantern, and tbe porter, were standing on tbe platform, Tbe former took bold of ber right arm and tbe latter ber left. She stepped down from tbe car upon tbe platform, alighting on ber right foot when ber ankle gave way and she would have fallen bad it not been for tbe assistance of tbe conductor and porter. It seems that in tbe act of alighting tbe whole weight of herself and child was cast upon ber weak ankle and tbe result was tbe injuries complained of.
*273It is contended that it was the duty of the defendant to have furnished a portable step upon which plaintiff, on leaving the car, could have alighted, and that if it had performed this duty she would not have been injured. This brings us to the consideration of the question of whether or not it was a duty enjoined by law upon defendant to have furnished a portable step for the use of plaintiff and other passengers in stepping from the car, in which she had been riding, down upon the platform.
The plaintiff was riding on a free pass over the defendant’s road, but if this was so we think under the established law of this State she sustained the relation of passenger to defendant, and that in an action like this where she is claiming damages for personal injuries alleged to have been occasioned by the negligence of the defendant, her rights are not different than if she had paid the usual fare for her passage. Buck v. Railway, 46 Mo. App. l. c. 564; Wagner v. Railway, 97 Mo. 512; Whitehead v. Railway, 99 Mo. 263; Willmott v. Railway, 106 Mo. 535; Jones v. Railway, 125 Mo. 666.
And as bearing upon the duty of the defendant it is to ' be observed that though it is disclosed by the evidence that the plaintiff’s right- ankle was weak and liable to turn, this fact was in no way brought to the -notice of the former’s employees in charge of the train on which the plaintiff took passage. It is not the duty of a railway company’s employees to assist its passengers in getting on and off its ears in all cases. If egress or ingress is easy, assistance can not be claimed by a passenger as a matter of right. Hanks v. Railway, 60 Mo. App. 274; Yarnell v. Railway, 113 Mo. 570. The obligation of passenger-carriers to their passengers is, as far as it is capable by human care and foresight, to carry them safely, which extends to getting on and off their cars; or expressed another way, they must exercise the highest degree of care of a prudent person in view of the circumstances *274at the time of the injury. Clark v. Railway, 127 Mo. 197. Where, however, a passenger is blind, sick, aged, very young, crippled, or infirm, if his condition be known to the carrier, the duty of the latter towards the former, while alighting, must be performed with due regard to such condition. Hanks v. Railway, supra; Ridenhour v. Railway, 102 Mo. 270. But there is no pretense in the present case that the defendant’s employees were aware of the plaintiff’s infirmity, so that the defendant owed her no higher or greater duty than it would have owed her had she been free of such infirmity.
It is not claimed 'the construction of the step of the car was faulty in not dropping to a nearer level with that of the platform of the station, or that it was of unusual construction in any way, but it is claimed that since the height of the last step was some eighteen or twenty inches above the platform, it was the duty of the defendant to have furnished a portable step for the > use of .the plaintiff and its other passengers while leaving its car. It appears that the defendant had been in the habit of furnishing a portable step to its other cars, but that none had been used in connection with the “smoker” for at least a year past. It further appears that the height of the last step of the “smoker” above the platform was not greater than that between the ground and the last step of the carriages, spring-wagons and buggies in general use. And it still further appeared that thousands of persons had made their exit from said smoker during the preceding year unassisted and without the happening of a single accident to them. We know of no law, nor has our- attention been called to any, which required the defendant to furnish portable steps for the use of its passengers in entering or leaving any of its cars. If it did furnish such steps, it was but a self-imposed duty for the violation of which there could, of course, be no liability. Barney v. Railway, 126 Mo. 392.
It is well settled that negligence can not be presumed when nothing has been done out of the usual course of busi*275ness, unless the course is improper, and that there must be some special circumstance calling for more particular care and caution to make liability. And where something unusual occurs which injures plaintiff, but such unusual occurrence is not even inferentially the result of an unusual act of the defendant, and the defendant has, as far as he is concerned, been pursuing his usual course, which has heretofore been done in safety, then the unusual occurrence is what is called an accident. Guffey v. Railway, 53 Mo. App. 462; Holt v. Railway, 84 Mo. App. 443; Hysell v. Swift, 78 Mo. App. 39; Brewing Ass’n. v. Talbot, 141 Mo. 674; Higgins v. Railway, 73 Ga. 149; Laflin v. Railway, 106 N. Y. 136. By the application of this rule to the facts of this case, as we have just stated them to be, it becomes at once apparent that the occurrence which resulted in plaintiff’s injury was np more than an accident for which there was no liability.
But it appears that tire defendant, in the discharge of its obligation to the plaintiff, exercised a greater degree of care than was required of it. It exercised that caution which would have been required if its employees had been apprised of the plaintiff’s infirmity. The platform seems to have been well enough lighted. There was a lamp suspended in front of the station building which shed considerable light on the platform, and besides this the conductor held a lantern which, with the lighted lamps within the several cars, shed quite a flood of light on the locus in quo. If the plaintiff desired to be relieved of her child, as she testified she did, so that she could be free of it while alighting, why did she not, when she came out upon the platform of the car and beheld the conductor and the porter standing there at the foot of the steps ready to offer assistance to the departing passengers, hand it to one or the other of them to hold for her? But instead of doing this, with her child in her arms, she proceeded without a word to step down from the last step upon the platform of the station, alighting on her right foot, thus cast*276ing upon her weak and infirm ankle tbe joint weight of herself and child, which was greater than it was capable of supporting without injury. And had it not been for the presence and assistance of the conductor and porter, when her ankle gave way she would have fallen.
It seems that according to her testimony she supposed there was a portable step there and so took the step without looking to see, though she could have seen, had she looked, whether or not it was there. She probably miscalculated the distance from the step to the platform but it was testified by one of the expert witnesses that such an accident under like circumstances would have probably occurred even if a portable step had been placed there and she had stepped upon that instead of upon the platform; but however this may have been, it is quite obvious that had she herself exercised ordinary care and relieved herself of the weight of her child and looked before “she leaped,” the result might have been different. It is equally obvious that the neglect of these precautions on her part were contributions to the negligence of the defendant, if it can be said to have been negligent, which was the direct and proximate cause of the injury.
In the light of the entire evidence it seems to us that upon the theory that the defendant was guilty of negligence under the circumstances in failing to furnish a portable step for plaintiff to alight upon, yet that the plaintiff has by her own contributory negligence, in that she failed (1) to notify the defendant’s employees in charge of the train on which she took passage of the weakness and infirmity of her ankle, (2) that she did not relieve herself of the burden of her child when, as was the case, she had ample opportunity affor’ded her by defendant’s employees to do so before she took the disastrous step she did, and (3) that she did not look, as she might have done to see whether there was any portable step there and what was the distance from the step down to the platform, precluded herself from the right of recovery.
*277It results from the foregoing expressed conclusions that the trial court was in error in denying the defendant’s demurrer to the evidence, and that therefore the judgment must be reversed.
All concur.