W. A. Tapley, by his next friend, brought suit against the Georgia and Florida Railway Company, to recover damages for a personal injury. A verdict was rendered in his favor for $500. The defendant moved for a new trial, which was refused, and it excepted.
1. Taking the allegations of the petition together, there was no error in overruling the demurrer.
2. While the court might, have stated to the jury somewhat more explicitly the contentions of the defendant, when the entire charge is considered it can not be held that he entirely omitted to refer to the contention that the plaintiff was asleep beside the track; and he informed them that the plaintiff must recover under the allegations of his petition, or not at all.
3. The plaintiff contended, that he went to a flag-station on the line of the defendant railway company and gave a signal for a passenger-train to stop, for that purpose stepping upon the track and using a lighted paper, it being dark; that the whistle was blown but the train did not stop, and while he was endeavoring to leave the track his foot was caught under the rail, and he was caused to fall in a position from which he could not entirely extricate himself
4. The court charged the jury that when a person presents himself at what is known as a “flag-station,” or a railroad-station at which there is no ticket-office, for the purpose of boarding a train which is running for the carriage of passengers, upon properly signaling an intention to get upon such passenger-train he would be considered as a passenger and would be entitled to the rights of a passenger. Later he made a more concrete application of the principle thus announced to the situation of the plaintiff, and instructed the jury that if the plaintiff presented himself at a point where the train was usually signaled, and did signal the passenger-train and indicated that he desired to become a passenger, in contemplation of law he was thereafter to be treated as a passenger, and the railroad company would be bound to the use of extraordinary diligence in regard to him.
Efforts to lay down a comprehensive definition of the word “passenger,” or, in a single statement, to exhaust all possible circumstances under which the relation of carrier and passenger may exist, have not proved very successful. The varying facts under which that relation may begin, continue, and terminate, render such a complete definition, applicable to all cases, difficult if not impossible. It is easy to declare that where one has purchased a
In Western & Atlantic R. Co. v. Voils, 98 Ga. 446 (26 S. E. 483, 35 L. R. A. 655), it was held that when a person goes to a railway-station where there is no ticket-office, but where it is customary for trains to stop when signaled in order to take on persons desiring to take passage, and by giving proper signals signifies his intention to become a passenger, and the train is stopped for the purpose of taking him on, he is, when attempting to take the train, a passenger, and is entitled to all the rights of a passenger, although he has not purchased a ticket. A mere intention on the part of a person to become a passenger, without regard to any act on the part of the company, does not, ipso facto, constitute him such a passenger. Neither does the mere giving of a signal at a flag-station make a person giving the signal a passenger on an approaching train.
The street-railway and omnibus cases are not in all respects analogous to those involving an effort to take passage on a steam-railway train at a flag-station. One difference which will be readily perceived arises from the fact that street-cars and omnibuses travel along highways which they do not own and over which other vehicles and pedestrians pass, while steam railways use a right of way along a fixed road-bed, and in many places have waiting-rooms at fixed places for the reception of passengers. Also street-cars and omnibuses usually stop either whenever signaled, or at certain short intervals upon signals, and passengers generally enter these conveyances in the public streets or at street-crossings. Nevertheless the reasoning in cases involving the question of whether a person has become a passenger upon such a vehicle may be useful in considering the same question with reference to whether one has become a passenger on a steam-railway train at a flag-station. See, in this connection: 4 Ruling Cases, 1003, § 471; Chicago Traction Co. v. O’Bryan, 219 Ill. 303 (76 N. E. 341); Webster v. Fitchburg R. Co., 161 Mass. 298 (37 N. E. 165, 24 L. R. A. 521);
From the foregoing discussion, it is evident that the trial court erred in instructing the jury to the effect that one who goes to a flag-station, and signals a passenger-train, thereby, without more, becomes a passenger.
Judgment reversed.