44 S.E.2d 576 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1947
Lead Opinion
1. The evidence authorized the verdict for the plaintiff.
2. The court did not err in refusing the defendant's written request to charge as complained of in ground two of the motion.
3. The court did not err in charging the jury with reference to the alleged negligence of the engineer in failing to stop his train as complained of in ground five.
4. The court did not err in overruling the defendant's motion for a mistrial.
343 (36 S.E.2d 435), which was affirmed by the Supreme Court in
1. The evidence upon the two trials was substantially the same. A comparison of the records shows that all of the witnesses who appeared for the plaintiff in the first trial testified in the last trial, and also one additional witness who saw the collision between the trains. All of the witnesses for the defendant on the first trial, with the exception of three, testified on the last trial, but no new or additional witnesses were sworn by the defendant. The documentary evidence was practically the same in both trials. Therefore the evidence in the two trials is not materially different. We held in effect on the first appeal that the evidence supported the verdict on the first trial, and although the second verdict for the plaintiff was substantially larger than the first, we can not say on the general grounds of the motion that it was unauthorized.
2. Ground two of the amended motion avers that the trial judge erred in failing to charge the jury a written request as follows: "I charge you further that the mere fact that the accident would not have happened if the conductor on Mr. Anderson's train, and the engineer on the other train had acted as it is claimed they should have acted, does not require the conclusion on your part that their conduct was a contributing cause to Mr. Anderson's death. The question of what was the proximate cause of his injury is the question solely for your determination within the rules of law given you in charge by the court."
The plaintiff in error contends that the charge requested embodied a correct legal principle which was applicable to the facts of the case, and that the court erred in refusing it even though in principle and in more abstract terms the charge requested may have been covered by other instructions given by the court. A long list of cases beginning with Terry v.State,
A specific charge requested must be legal and correct as a matter of law, and if it does not state a correct principle of law it should be refused. We have considered the request refused by the court in this case very carefully, and without regard to any other objections that may be made to it, we have concluded that it does not state a correct legal principle. The charge requested referred to the conduct of the conductor on Mr. Anderson's train, and to the acts and conduct of the engineer on the other train, and it related to the specific negligence alleged against said conductor and engineer. As to the conductor, it was claimed that he did not apply the brakes on his train and stop the same promptly upon the failure of the deceased to blow the meeting point signal before reaching that point, and the negligence claimed against the engineer on the approaching train was that he did not maintain a lookout down the track, and did not discover the other train on the main line, and did not exercise ordinary care in stopping his train before *832 striking deceased's train. The alleged negligence of these two employees, the conductor and the engineer, was all the negligence charged by the plaintiff against the defendant after other allegations of negligence had been stricken on demurrer.
The request submitted, if charged, would have instructed the jury that even though the collision would not have occurred if the conductor and the engineer had not been negligent, this fact did not require the conclusion that their negligence was a contributing cause of the collision. We do not think this was a correct statement of the law applicable to the case. Exactly the reverse of what the request contained seems to us to be correct. If there would have been no collision had the conductor and engineer not been guilty of negligence in one or more of the ways alleged, it seems to follow that if they were negligent such negligence necessarily contributed to the collision and the death of the deceased. In other words, if the jury found as a matter of fact that without the negligence of the conductor and the engineer there would have been no collision, such finding would require a conclusion on their part that such negligent conduct was a contributing cause of Mr. Anderson's death. If the collision would not have occurred, had the conductor and the engineer not been negligent as alleged, causes wholly outside of their negligence did not operate alone to bring about the collision. It must follow that if there would have been no collision without their negligence, such negligence in part caused the collision and necessarily thus contributed thereto. The charge requested was tantamount to an instruction that even though the conductor and engineer were negligent in the ways alleged by the plaintiff, and that their negligence caused the collision in that it would not have occurred without their negligence, the jury could still find that their negligence could not have contributed to the collision and the death of the plaintiff's husband. We think the request was properly refused for the reasons stated.
3. Ground five alleges that the court erred in submitting in the charge to the jury a ground of negligence not authorized by the evidence and which could not constitute a basis for a recovery. One of the acts of negligence alleged against the engineer on train number 57, which ran into the deceased engineer's train, number 12, was that he was negligent in not exercising ordinary care to bring his train to a stop after seeing the other train on the main *833
line. It may be conceded under the authorities that follow that if there was no evidence to support this ground of negligence it should not have been submitted to the jury. Columbus Mfg. Co.
v. Gray,
Whether the court erred in submitting an issue not supported by the evidence depends entirely upon the evidence. The engineer on number 57 testified that when he saw train number 12 on the main-line track he immediately applied the emergency brakes, and put his engine in reverse and did everything that could be done for the purpose of stopping his train. It is the contention of the railroad company that there was no evidence sufficient to contradict and overcome the testimony of this engineer and that no issue was made by the evidence on this point. It appears from the testimony of the engineer that he saw the deceased's train on the main line when he was at least 985 feet from it; that his train was traveling around 50 miles an hour just as he came from under the overhead bridge and could see the other train. He admitted that he could have stopped his train in about 650 feet if it had been going at 30 miles an hour. His fireman testified that in his opinion train number 57 was "going between 30 or 35 or 40 miles an hour" down by the overhead bridge, instead of about 50 miles an hour as testified by the engineer. All of the evidence tended to show that the bridge was in the neighborhood of 1000 feet from where the *834 trains collided, and if the testimony of the fireman as to the speed of his train at the bridge was correct, and the testimony of the engineer as to how quickly he could stop the train going 30 miles an hour, there was a question for the jury as to whether or not the engineer exercised proper diligence in undertaking to stop his train. Furthermore, on this question of stopping the train, the conductor on number 12 testified to the effect that the other train, going 25 or 30 miles an hour, could be stopped in five or six car lengths, about 200 feet. The fireman on number 12 testified that the engineer on number 57 jumped off just as he came in sight, his testimony being in part as follows: "The engineer of the other train jumped off. I don't know how far his locomotive was from my locomotive at the time he jumped — he jumped off about the time he seen us — about the time he got in sight where I could see him, he ran out the gangway and jumped off, just as he came out from under the bridge, he jumped off." This testimony was in conflict with the testimony of the engineer as to when he jumped from his train, and may have tended to show what diligence or lack of diligence the engineer exercised after seeing the other train. It will be noted that the testimony referred to thus far came from witnesses who were employees of the railroad company at the time of the collision, namely, the engineer on train number 57 and his fireman, and the conductor and fireman on train number 12. Another witness who was a former railroad engineer for about 25 years with the Southern Railway Company testified that an engine and train of the length and type of train number 57 going at a speed of 50 miles an hour, could be stopped in 500 feet or less on application of the emergency brakes. Another witness for the plaintiff testified that he saw both trains, that number 12 stopped on the track just back of his house, and that when the other train, number 57, came under the bridge it was running pretty fast, and as to whether it changed its speed, "It looked like if it had changed any I couldn't tell it."
We think it clearly appears from this testimony of the several witnesses referred to that a question was presented for the jury as to whether the engineer on train number 57 exercised all due care and diligence in stopping his train after he observed the other train on the track immediately in front of him, and that this issue was properly submitted to the jury. See Newman v. *835 Southern Ry. Co.,
4. Ground eight complains of the overruling of a motion for mistrial made by the defendant because of alleged improper remarks of counsel for the plaintiff. It appears that at the conclusion of the evidence and during a discussion of certain law points between the court and counsel, Mr. Arnold, one of the leading counsel for the plaintiff, stated in the presence of the jury that: "Mr. Anderson (the deceased engineer) was doing as the followers of Christ should do, staying at his post of duty. The defendant claims that he stayed when he ought not to have done so. It is true that he could have done like engineer Arnold, jumped like a rabbit." Thereupon counsel for the defendant moved for a mistrial because of "the inflammatory remarks of counsel" for the plaintiff. The court denied the motion in these words: "I overrule the motion. You can argue the case to the jury, Mr. Arnold, but don't argue anything that is not in the record."
It is contended by the defendant that it did not claim in its pleadings, or in the trial of the case, that engineer Anderson was negligent in not jumping from his train after it stopped; and that the language used by counsel for the plaintiff was highly inflammatory and prejudicial, and was unwarranted by the facts. *836
It is contended by the plaintiff that the defendant objected to the remarks of counsel during the trial solely on the ground that they were inflammatory, and did not then claim they misstated the facts; and that the language was warranted by the pleadings and the evidence and was in no sense inflammatory or prejudicial to the defendant. To review these contentions in detail in an opinion would require references to parts of the pleadings and much of the evidence, and we do not think that necessary or proper. We have carefully considered the several cases cited by the defendant in which it has been held that a mistrial should have been granted on account of improper remarks of counsel, and none of them seem to us to require a conclusion different from the one we have reached in this case. As stated in Central ofGeorgia Ry. Co. v. White,
Under the rules of law applicable to this ground of the motion for new trial, we can not say that the remarks complained of were not authorized under the record and the evidence, or that they were inflammatory or prejudicial to the defendant, and that the trial judge abused his discretion in overruling the motion for mistrial.
Judgment affirmed. Sutton, C. J., concurs. Felton, J.,concurs specially. *837
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the judgment and the rulings in grounds one, three, and four. I concur in the conclusion that the court did not err in refusing to give in charge the request shown in division two of the opinion but I cannot subscribe to the reasons given for the ruling. Technically, and as far as it goes the request is a correct statement of the law in such a case as this where the question is whether one of two or more concurring acts of negligence on the part of different parties constitutes the proximate cause of an injury. The contention of the widow here was that the negligence of the conductor on one train and the engineer on the other was the proximate cause of the injuries. The railroad contended that the proximate cause was the negligence of the deceased engineer. The rule in such cases is that the jury is not required to find that any one act of negligence is a contributing proximate cause merely because the injury would not have occurred in the absence of such act of negligence. The request here stated the rule as to the railroad's contention and point of view, but did not state the principle as applicable also to the widow's contention. To be complete and fair as a principle of law covering all issues it should have also included the statement that the jury would also not be required to find that the deceased engineer's negligence was the sole proximate cause of the wreck merely because without his negligence the wreck would not have occurred.