in the Court below found that the appellant did not assume the risk. The question is one of fact, and the finding cannot, in the circum- stances of the case, be disturbed.
Further, it was said that the appellant was guilty of contributory negligence, that he had not taken ordinary or reasonable care for his own safety. But this defence was also negatived in point of fact in the Court below, and the finding ought not, in the circum- stances of the case, to be disturbed.
Accordingly, the judgment of the Court below ought to be reversed, and judgment entered for the appellant for £1,100, the amount of damages assessed below, with costs of action and the costs of this appeal.
ISAACS J. This appeal, in my opinion, necessarily compels a very close analysis of the doctrine formulated as settled law in Indermaur V. Dames 1, and particularly with reference to the effect of an invitee's knowledge of the danger he incurs.
The appellant sued the respondent for negligently omitting to light the platform of the railway station at Mallala, whereby the appellant sustained injury. The learned trial Judge, Poole J., gave judgment for the respondent on the ground that the appellant had "knowledge of the existence of the danger," founding his decision on the well-known passage in Lord Atkinson's judgment in Cavalier v. Pope 2. In order properly to understand the position, and especially to see precisely the real meaning of the decision of Poole J., both on the facts and the law, it is very necessary, in the first place, to state some of the circumstances.
Mallala is an intermediate or wayside station. The accident took place on the evening of 23rd June 1922, the middle of winter. The usual time for opening the office for business was then 6.25 p.m. The appellant arrived at or about 6.30 to send a packet by train. It was then SO dark that, there being no lamps lit, he had to light a match to look at his watch. The station-master arrived at 6.41, the incoming train being due at 6.54 and timed to leave on its for- ward journey at 7.9. The appellant transacted his business with
1(1866) L.R. 1 C.P., 274 : (1867) L.R. 2 C.P., 311.
2(1906) A.C., at p. 432.