6 Ga. App. 128 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1909
Cook brought suit in the county court to recover' the value of a Jersey cow which he alleged was killed by the “Atlantic Coast Line, owning and operating a railroad under the laws of the State of Georgia, a corporation having an office and agent in said county.” Process was directed to the defendant as the “Atlantic Coast Line Eailway Company” and was served upon the defendant, the “Atlantic Coast Line Eailroad Company,” by serving its agent, F. B. Harris, in said county personally with a.
The second and third grounds of special demurrer, that the petition was “defective in that it failed to allege what train or locomotive of the defendant company killed the plaintiff’s cow, or in what direction the train or locomotive was moving when the plaintiff’s cow was killed,” if at all meritorious, were fully met by appropriate amendment. The first ground of the demurrer, that no specific act of negligence was charged in the petition, and that only negligence in general terms was charged, is not sustained by an inspection of the petition, it being distinctly alleged in the petition that the defendant “negligently and carelessly struck and killed the cow,” because at the time she was killed “she was in such position on the railroad track as to be visible to the engineer at least one half mile before the train reached her,” and that it was in the daytime when the cow was killed. We think this is a sufficient allegation of negligence.
There is no merit whatever in any of the grounds contained in the motion for a new trial, general or special, and the verdict is' fully supported by the evidence. Judgment affirmed.