119 Ga. 234 | Ga. | 1903
J. B. Goodman, as next' friend of the minor children of A. B. Goodman, brought an action against the Central of Georgia Railway Company, for damages, for the homicide of the father of such children, alleged to have been caused by the negligent running of the ears of the defendant company! Upon the trial the contentions of the plaintiff were, in substance: that the deceased went, at night, to Pomona, a flag-station on the defendant’s road, to board a regular suburban passenger-train, to go to Griffin; that the usual stopping-place at that station for taking on and discharging passengers was where a public highway crossed the defendant’s track; that a companion of the deceased, when they saw the train approaching the station, got on such crossing and with a lantern gave the proper and usual signal for the train to stop; that, notwithstanding such signal could have been seen by the servants of the defendant in charge of such train in ample time to stop it at the crossing, they negligently failed to do so, but ran it by at the rate of twenty or thirty milés an' hour, and stopped it some forty or fifty yards beyond the crossing; that the train remained stationary a sufficient length of time where it stopped to induce the deceased to believe that it was waiting for him to board it at that place;' thát accordingly he and his companion started to the train, his companion, with the lantern, walking on the side to the right of the track and the deceased walking on the track, for the reasons that the side where his companion walked was obstructed by numbers of loose cross-ties, placed there by defendant, and on the side to the left of the track there was a gully a.nd side-track, the spaces between the cross-ties of which had not been filled, and that as deceased had no light he could not safely walk on either side of the main track; that as the deceased reached the rear end' of the train he stepped to the left side of the track and caught hold of the handle bars of the steps ” of the rear coach, to board the train; that no employee of the company was there to look out and give warning, and that, just as he took hold of the handle bars, the train, without any signal or warning whatever, suddenly started back, knocking him in front of the rear trucks, running over him, and inflicting upon him such injuries as caused his death; and that the deceased was entirely
The other grounds of the motion for a new trial do not require special consideration. Some of the questions made are not likely to arise upon another trial. Two of the requests to charge do not appear to have been made in writing, and two others, set out in the tenth and eleventh grounds of the motion for a new trial, in effect stated that certain specified acts on the part of the deceased would amount to negligence.
Judgment reversed.