14 Ga. App. 69 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1913
Tbe plaintiff, as administratrix, brought an action against the receivers of tbe Atlanta, Birmingham & Atlantic Railroad Company for damages on account of the alleged tortious homicide of her intestate. The petition contained two counts. Each count stated the cause of action in substantially the same language, and in each instance the right to recover was based upon the same allegations of negligence. In the first count it was alleged that the plaintiff was entitled to recover under the act of Congress known as the “employer’s liability act;” and in the second count the right to recover was based upon the law of Georgia. In each count it was alleged, that the decedent was a train-hand in the employment of the receivers, 'on a freight-train which ran between Brunswick and Fitzgerald, Georgia, and that while in the performance of his duties he was killed as a result of the negligent handling of the engine by the engineer. The receivers demurred, on the ground that the. petition was inconsistent and duplicitous, and contained a misjoinder of causes of action, in that in the first count the plaintiff sought to recover the value of the life of the decedent to the plain
One who sues for damages for a tortious homicide may set forth in two. or more separate counts different accounts of the manner in which the decedent was killed, so as to meet anticipated variations in the proof which may be adduced at the trial. Gainesville Ry. Co. v. Austin, 127 Ga. 120 (56 S. E. 254).
In such a case each count must be complete in itself and set forth a cause of action, without the necessity of resorting to averments in any other count in the petition. Cooper v. Portner Brewing Co., 112 Ga. 894 (38 S. E. 91). In the present case each count was complete in itself, and the only point made is that the plaintiff could not, in the same petition, base her right to recover upon both the Federal and the State law. It was not necessary for the plaintiff to affirmatively allege her right to recover under any particular law, either State or Federal. If her petition set forth facts which entitled her to recover under any law which the court had jurisdiction to apply, this was all that was necessary. Southern Ry. Co. v. Ansley, 8 Ga. App. 325 (68 S. E. 1086).
We know of no reason why a plaintiff suing a railroad company for damages for a tortious homicide can not allege in one count that the decedent was engaged in interstate commerce, and in another that he was engaged in intrastate commerce. Sometimes it may be doubtful whether the business in which a decedent was engaged was interstate or intrastate commerce. This is a mixed question of law and .fact. It is permissible for a plaintiff to vary his allegations with respect to this matter, in order to anticipate the proof to be adduced on the subject. It is true that wherever the Federal law is applicable, it supersedes the State law; and both