3 Ga. App. 513 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1908
Mrs. Arthur recovered a verdict for $1,500 against the Augusta Railway & Electric Company, as damages for personal injuries alleged to have been inflicted by the negligence of the defendant in running one of its cars on the streets of Augusta, whereby she was knocked down and her foot was crushed and mangled, rendering its amputation necessary, the injury being permanent. The defendant company moved for a new trial, and here excepts to the judgment refusing its motion. Error is assigned in the bill of exceptions on all of the grounds of the motion for a new trial. These are eight in number, but can well be grouped and eousidered under two heads.
It is not within our power to declare a verdict contrary to the evidence, — -we can only declare a verdict, for lack of any evidence to support it, to be contrary to law. The credibility of the witnesses is a matter wholly for the jury. The trial judge is clothed with the discretion to review the finding of the jury upon the evidence, where the verdict is so manifestly contrary to the great preponderance of the testimony as to fail to meet his approval, or as to be contrary to his conscientious judgment as to the justice of the cause. And the exercise of this discretion will not be controlled, unless abused. But we see no reason in this case why even the trial judge should have disapproved the verdict upon the facts. When the plaintiff proved her injury, and that it was caused by the defendant company, the presumption of negligence arose against the company, which it was required to rebut. The company recognized this in the very clear plea filed in the case: “4. Defendant, further answering, says that plaintiff should not have and maintain her said alleged cause of action, because: (a) The injury complained -of was the result of plaintiff’s own negligence. (6) The plaintiff, by the exercise of ordinary care and diligence, could have avoided the consequences of defendant’s alleged negligence. (c) Defendant and defendant’s servant were in the exercise of all ordinary care and diligence at the time and place of the alleged injury. (d) If the said injury was not the result of plaintiff’s own negligence, and if plaintiff could not have, by the exercise of ordinary care and diligence, avoided the consequences of defendant’s alleged negligence, then the injury was the result of an accident pure and simple, for which the company can not be held responsible.” The defendant’s defense was threefold. Under paragraph c it attempted to rebut the presumption of negligence. Paragraphs a and b averred that the plaintiff could not recover, on account of her own negligence, and -paragraph ct pleaded that the injury was the result of an accident. In support
The testimony in behalf of the defendant, while it does not appear to us to be any more definite or positive than that in behalf of the plaintiff, would have defeated any recovery by the plaintiff, if the jury had elected to credit it in preference to the testimony of the plaintiff. In the exercise of their prerogative they did not see proper to believe it. By their verdict they found that the evidence for the defendant was not sufficient to remove-the burden cast upon it. We should have disposed of this phase of the case much more summarily, but for the earnest sincerity and marked ability with which it was argued by the learned counsel for the plaintiff in error. ' We think, however, that the learned counsel lost sight of the fact that the plaintiff’s prima facie case— that is, her injury, and that it was caused by the car of the defendant — was uncontradieted, and that thus the burden of proof thereafter was not upon the plaintiff. It was cast upon the defendant, and the jury had the right to require that the defendant remove the presumption of negligence arising by operation of law, by the preponderance of the testimony. The same rule applies to-the three allegations of negligence as to which the plaintiff in error complains as to the paucity of the proof. While the plaintiff can only recover on the special grounds of negligence alleged, still, when she has shown the injury and that it was caused by the car of the company, all of the allegations of negligence stand proved until they are rebutted by proof in behalf of the defendant. The-plaintiff could recover on one allegation of negligence successfully established, although the proof might be insufficient to show a number of others which are alleged. But under the presumption, of negligence and the rule laid down in the Neely case, 56 Ga. 540, all acts of negligence property alleged in the petition must be disproved by the defendant after it has been estáblished that the injury was caused by the defendant railroad.
There is no merit in the objection to the admission by the • court of evidence as to the number of feet in a mile, or the-number of seconds in an hour. This evidence was of probative value in enabling the jury to consider the measurements-made, applying it to the testimony as to the speed of the car, to-determine the probable weight to be attached to the conflicting-statements of the different witnesses as to what transpired immediately previous to the injury to the plaintiff. Logically relevant facts are always admissible. Wigmore on Evidence, §39.
Judgment affirmed.