This action was commenced by Jesse McNab, suing by his next, friend, Alf McNab, against, the Central of Georgia Railway Company, a corporation, to recover damages on account of personal iniuries alleged to have3 been suffered by the plaintiff while a passenger on one of defendant’s trains and through the negligence of the defendant. Plaintiff recovered a judgment against the defendant in the. circuit court, from which judgment the defendant has appealed. Pending the appeal the next friend (lied, and the cause has been revived in this court in the name of G. S. McDowell, Jr., as next friend. This is the proper practice in such staff3 of the case.—14 Ency. of Pl. & Pr. 1002 (4.)
In the complaint special damages are claimed for loss of time and for money expended for medicines and physicians’ services. If it should he conceded that such damages are not recoverable by a minor, yet there is no *339reversible error in the ruling of the court overruling defendant's motion to strike such claim from the complaint, as the defendant had the right to protect itself against the recovery of such damages by objections to evidence and by special charges.—Vandiver & Co. v. Waller, 143 Ala. 411, 39 South. 136. The defendant did object to the evidence tending to show such damages, and also requested the court, to charge the jury in writing that such damages were not recoverable by the plaintiff. Therefore we must determine the contention of the defendant on its merits.
It was admitted on the trial that Alf McNab was the father of the plaintilf. That the father is entitled to the services of an infant son, and may recover for the loss of them occasioned by the wrongful or negligent act of another, as a general proposition, may be conceded. The right of recovery for such loss is founded, not on the parental relation, but on the technical relation of master and servant.—Durden v. Barnett & Harris, 7 Ala. 169; Lyon v. Bolling, 14 Ala. 753, 48 Am. Dec. 122. But the father may emancipate the minor son, and thus relinquish all claim to his sendees or the earnings of his industry; aud emancipation may be shown, as may any other fact., either directly or by circumstances from which the jury would be authorized to infer the fact of emancipation. And the. law will permit an emancipated minor to recover for loss of time occasioned by a personal injury caused by the negligence of a defendant.—Lyon v. Bolling, supra; Forbes v. Loftin, 50 Ala. 396; Benziger v. Miller, 50 Ala. 206. It cannot be said that the record affords no evidence from which the jury was authorized to infer the fact of emancipation. Therefore1 evidence of time lost by the plaintiff and the value thereof was properly admitted.
In respect to the claim for 'money expended in employing a physician and for medicine, the complaint alleges that the plaintiff had to expend large sums of money for physicians and medicine. Under these averments it was competent to show that a physician did attend upon the plaintiff during his illness, that medi*340cine was furnished by the physician in his ministrations upon the plaintiff, and the reasonable value of the services and medicine. But to authorize recovery under the averments of the complaint it would be necessary that such reasonable sums were expended. In the case of Forbes v. Loftin, supra, which was a suit by a minor, suing by next friend, to recover damages arising from a personal injury caused by the defendant, the plaintiff claimed as a part of the damages a physician’s bill. The court said, with respect to the right of the plaintiff to recover: “The medical attention rendered to the plaintiff during her illness was a proper charge against somebody, whether performed at her request or not. She, though a minor, has no father or guardian. In a suit against her by the physician, her minority, if a defense at all, would be a personal one, of which she might avail or not, as she chose. The defendant can derive no benefit from it. A judgment against him in this suit for such damage would protect him against any other possible suit for the same damage.” The fact- that, in the suit in hand, the next friend in Avhose name the suit was brought and prosecuted to judgment was the plaintiff’s father would seem to bring the case within the ruling made in the case quoted from.—Abeles v. Bransfield, 19 Kan. 16; Baker v. Flint & Pere Marquette R. Co., 51 N. W. 987, 91 Mich. 298, 16 L. R. A. 154, 30 Am. St. Rep. 471.
The evidence tended to show that the plaintiff at. the time he received the injury was at work for himself and was getting for his labor from 50 to 60 cents per day. He received the injury in September, 1904, and the cause was tried on the 23d day of May, 1905. The plaintiff was allowed to prove the value at the time of the trial of the kind of labor he was doing when he was injured. This we think was error, but without injury to the defendant, as the record affirmatively shows that the price of such labor at the time of the trial was the same as when the injury was received.
It is alleged in the complaint that the defendant failed to allow plaintiff a reasonable time in which to alight from the train after reaching the station to which *341plaintiff had purchased his ticket. It ivas necessary and competent for plaintiff to prove the length of time the train stopped at the station. Dr. Long, a passenger on the train, and bound for the same station the plaintiff ivas, testified that he had a basket of grapes in his hand when the train reached the station, that he went out on the platform of the car and got off, that his wife met him at the train and was standing on the ground at the steps of the car. He ivas asked: “How long did the train stop at Comer Station?” He answered: “The train stopped a very short .time, I do not know' howr long it stopped; but it only stopped long-enough for my wdfe to tell me that some one wranted to see me at Batesville, and for her to give me my medicine chest, and me to give her the basket of grapes and to tell her to send my buggy through the country to me, and by that time the train urns moving off.” The witness couud not state the exact time, and wre think the answer given wras relevant and competent as tending to illustrate or give to the jury some idea of the time the train stopped. The witness ivas subjected to cross-examination by the defendant with respect to the attendant circumstances stated by him. The court guard"' ed the answer by telling the jury it could only be looked to as tending to show' how long the train stopped. The fact that the train ivas moving viien the witness Long got on a,t Comer, in connection with his other testimony, was competent as tending to illustrate or show the length of time the train stopped.
The evidence showed that the plaintiff was on the car set apart for colored people, and a car length from the platform udiieh Long dismounted from and returned to the car. So the condition of the platform wdiere Long was w'as not competent or relevant evidence, and should have been excluded. For the same reason the evidence of Belle Cobb, objected to by the defendant, Should have been excluded. Grant’s evidence, objected to by the defendant, should have been excluded. It is not in the same category with the evidence of Dr. Long with respect to the time the train stopped. Long had testified that he could not tell how long the train *342.stopped, and referred to the circumstances that took place immediately upon his getting off the train. He did not attempt to detail any conversation between himself and his wife, but simply stated the circumstances.
The demurrer to the complaint was properly overruled. The averment that the plaintiff’s mind had become injuriously affected is a statement of fact.' It was not necessary to good pleading in this respect for the pleader to set out in detail the manner in which the mind of the plaintiff was affected, or to give the symptoms which characterized the affliction.
There is no evidence; in the record which tends to show that plaintiff expended any money for medicine' or for a physician’s services. Tlierefore the proof did not meet the averments of the complaint in respect to these items of damages, and the parts of the oral charge of the court designated as “(!)’•* and “(2)” should not have been given. That portion of the general charge of the court excepted to and marked “(3)’’ is an invasion of the province of the jury and constitutes reversible error.—Ala. Min. R. R. Co. v. Jones, 114 Ala. 519, on page 533, 21 South. 507, 62 Am. St. Rep. 121; Decatur Car Wheel Co. v. Mehaffey, 128 Ala. 242, 29 South. 646.
The complaint contains no allegations to the effect that the plaintiff’s capacity to earn wages has' been permanently diminished, and therefore the fourth paragraph of the oral charge of the court should not have been given.
The fifth paragraph of the' oral charge, is erroneous in hypothesizing that, if the employee's could have by due diligence known of plaintiff's perilous position, etc. The law charges a carrier with actionable negligence when, with knowledge of a passenger's perilous position, it fails to take proper steps to avert injury, or does an act, with such knowledge or reason to know, which causes injury to the passenger. But without such knowledge the carrier may act upon the presumption that the passenger will exercise clue care to avoid perilous positions.—Birmingham Union Ry. Co. v. Smith, 90 Ala. 60, 8 South. 86, 24 Am. St. Rep. 761; Montgom*343ery & Eufaula Ry. Co. v. Stewart, 91 Ala. 421, 8 South. 708.
The complaint avers in the first count that “as soon as said train stopped at Comer said plaintiff started to leave the train upon which he was a passenger as aforesaid and upon which lie rightfully ivas, and had gotten as far as the platform of the car upon which he was when said train stopped, which was part of said train, when defendant negligently and ivrongfully, and in violation of the duty that defendant owned plaintiff;' to allow him a reasonable length of time to alight from said train, started the train to moving off, liy which wrongful and negligent conduct plaintiff ivas thrown from said platform to the ground upon his head, in consequence of which plaintiff was made unconscious,” etc. That all intendments must he taken against the pleader is a well recognized rule of pleading. Apptying this rule to the foregoing averments,'the only reasonable construction of the complaint is that the plaintiff was thrown from the train when it started to moving off at Comer, and that he was thrown by the “moving off’’ of the Train. The undisputed evidence as to the place where1 he fell from the train shows that he was 300 yards from Comer, and after the train had attained a speed of at least 15 miles per hour. Further,, the plaintiff gives the only account of where, and how he fell from or left the train, and we note this as his only explanation, viz.: “And before I was able to get off said train it started from said station, and in some way after said train had got some distance, from said station — do not know how far — I in some way fell off' said train. I do not know how I got off. I do not know whether Í fell off, or was pushed off, or was knocked off, or how it was I fell off, said train.” It. seems clear to us that a fatal variance is shown between the averments of the complaint and the evidence as to the time, place, and cause of the, injury. A like criticism is applicable to the second count, and the evidence. In this state-of the case the defendant was entitled to' the. general affirmative charge, as requested by it in charges. *344numbered 3 in its series, and the court erred in not giving it.
In this view of the case, there is no necessity for considering other charges refused to the defendant, nor the motion for a new trial. For the errors pointed out, the judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and tlie cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
Tyson, C. J., and Haralson and Simfson, JJ., concur.