13 Ga. App. 781 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1913
The plaintiff filed a petition alleging that the death of one John Carswell, a.boy 17 years old, was due to the negligence of the defendant, and, under the provisions of section 4424 of the Civil Code, averred that she was entitled to the value of Cars-well’s services until he reached his majority. The plaintiff’s right
So far as the provisions of section 4424 of the Civil Code affect the present ease, recovery is confined to the mother, and the question presented, therefore, is whether the allegations of the petition are such as make the plaintiff in legal effect the mother of the deceased. Upon this point we think the case is controlled by the decision of this court in City of Albany v. Lindsey, 11 Ga. App. 573 (75 S. E. 911). The only difference between these two cases, so far as appears from the record, is that in that ease the father was dead, whereas it is to be assumed in the present case that the father of John Carswell is still alive. But we think the allegations as to the father’s consent and his subsequent conduct during the remainder of the child’s life are such as to show a complete renunciation of parental control within the terms of section 3021 of the Civil Code. By special demurrer the defendant might have objected to the allegation in reference to the father’s renunciation of
In the brief of learned counsel for the plaintiff in error it is insisted that the case presents, as additional features for consideration, (1) an attempted recovery of damages for the death of an employee occurring within the yard limits of a railroad; (2) that the death of the decedent might have been prevented by the exercise of ordinary care upon his own part; and (3) that the provisions of the act of 1909 (Civil Code, § 2782) are not applicable, since the plaintiff did not have the rights conferred by -that act at the time the child was given her by the mother. As to the first proposition, we are of the opinion that the statement that the deceased was an employee of the railroad company is not material to .the action, but is made merely by way of inducement and as part of the history of the case. As to the second feature it is only necessary to say that the question of the comparative negligence of the parties is one so wholly for determination by the jury that the the trial judge very properly declined to deal with it on demurrer.