Frances Clinard filed a suit for damages against Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company and R. H. Bramlett, its engineer, alleging that she was negligently injured by the
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defendants when an automobile in which she was riding as a guest passenger struck the side of a box car forming a part of a stationary freight train on a public (the Mock) crossing near Albany, Georgia. The defendants demurred to the petition generally; and also specially on eleven different grounds. All of the demurrers were overruled, and to that judgment there is a proper exception. The defendants also answered the petition and denied all acts of negligence charged against them. The case resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff, and the defendants moved for a new trial on the usual general grounds and by amendment added eight special grounds, in which they complain of several portions of the charge as given, of the court’s failure to give specified and allegedly pertinent instructions to the jury, and of the alleged erroneous admission over timely and proper objection of what is alleged to be hearsay evidence, self-serving declarations, and other prejudicial and harmful testimony. The amended motion for new trial was denied, and the movants sued out a writ of error to the Court of Appeals. On November 24, 1954, the Court of Appeals transferred the case to this court for decision. The transfer order recites: “This case came before this court upon a writ of error from the City Court of Albany, and upon a record formally certified and transmitted by the clerk of that court. Upon consideration of the case by the Court of Appeals sitting as a body, the court was equally divided as to the judgment that should be rendered, Townsend, Quillian and Nichols, JJ., being for affirmance, and Felton, C. J., Gardner, P. J., and Carlisle, J., being for reversal. It is therefore ordered that the case be transferred to the Supreme Court of Georgia, in compliance with the last subdivision of Paragraph 8, Section 2, Article 6, of the amendment to the Constitution of the State ratified in the election of August 7, 1945.” The record transferred to this court contains a per curiam memorandum opinion, which shows that there was another guest passenger riding in the car at the time of the collision here involved. The other guest passenger was Horace C. Marshall. He also sued these same defendants for injuries sustained in the collision, recovered damages, and the Court of Appeals in his case reversed the judgment denying the movants a new trial, basing its reversal solely on the general grounds of the motion. See
Atlantic Coast Line
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R. Co.
v.
Marshall,
89
Ga. App
740 (
Returned to the Court of Appeals.
