117 Ga. 47 | Ga. | 1903
Reynolds sued the Waycross Air-Line Railroad Company for damages, alleged to have been sustained by him in consequence of injuries received by the falling of a telephone pole forming a part of a telephone line owned and operated by the defendant company, which pole he, in the course of his employment by the company as a lineman, had ascended for the purposqof repairing a broken telephone wire. In his petition he alleged that the pole in question fell while he was at the top of it, engaged in such work, and that the defendant was negligent, “ in that it did not place said telephone pole a proper depth in the earth, the same having only been placed in the earth about fourteen inches, whereas it should have been placed therein about five feet; that if it had been placed in the earth said latter named depth, it would have
That the general reputation with which a witness called to impeach another, under this section of the Civil Code, must be acquainted, before he is qualified to testify upon the subject, is not necessarily confined to general reputation in the immediate neighborhood where the witness sought to be impeached resides, is shown by the decision of this court in Boswell v. Blackman, 12 Ga. 591. In that case the defendants in the court below introduced two witnesses for the purpose of impeaching Burrel Blackman, a witness who had testified for the plaintiff. These, two witnesses testified that they had known the witness Blackman, for the last eight or ten years, in Russell County, Ala.; that he was generally known and had a general reputation in that county. Defendants then proposed to ask these witnesses if they knew the general character of Blackman for truth and veracity in the county of Russell. “The court ruled out the question, deciding that it should be confined to the character of the witness in the neighborhood where he lived.” This ruling was excepted to, and this court held that it -was erroneous. Nisbet, J., who delivered the opinion, said : “ The impeachment must be by persons acquainted with the witness. And they are called to speak of his general character for
As the errors of law dealt with above require the grant of a new trial, we do nob deem it necessary to consider the grounds of the motion for a new trial which involve the sufficiency of the evidence, in any particular, to support the verdict, as upon another trial the evidence may not be the same.
Judgment reversed.