103 Ga. 224 | Ga. | 1897
Butler street, in the city of Atlanta is spanned by a railway bridge which connects two portions of a high embankment. Upon this embankment and across this bridge are laid a number of railway-tracks, two of which were used by the Southern Railway Company, during the continuance of the Cotton States and International Exposition, for running trains carrying passengers between the city and the exposition grounds. For convenience, these two tracks will hereinafter be designated as the “exposition ” tracks. That one of them which was on the northern side or margin of the embankment was used for incoming trains, and the one immediately south of it for outgoing trains, there being between the
We shall not discuss the question whether or not the plaintiff should be regarded in the light of a trespasser. Assuming that he was not, and that he went upon the railroad right of way as a licensee, we are of the opinion that he might, by the
We do not mean to say that there'was no evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant,company. The jury might certainly have found that it was guilty of negligence in running its train more rapidly than the city ordinance permitted, and the evidence might have warranted inferences of negligence in other respects; but there was no testimony upon which a finding that the company’s servants in charge of the train were guilty of wantonness, or of a wilful disregard of the plaintiff’s safety, could stand. He was struck at the very instant he got upon the edge of the track. There was no time for the company’s servants to do anything after he placed himself in this position. The collision was then inevitable. There is no support in the evidence for the theory that the plaintiff was “run down” and hurt. On the contrary, even after the defendant’s negligence became, relatively to the plaintiff, operative and threatening, it was still within his power, by exercising ordinary care, to avoid the consequences of that negligence ; and therefore his case undoubtedly falls within the provisions of section 3830 of the Civil Code.
Judgment affirmed.