42 Ga. App. 623 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1931
1. Where a person, after having stopped, looked and listened at a public railroad-crossing for an approaching train and observed none, and, by reason of a curve in the track three hundred yards distant, could not have seen an approaching train until it was within three hundred yards of the crossing, went upon the track, unaware of the approach of a train which afterwards ran into and injured him, and was not aware of the presence of the train until it was in forty or fifty feet of him and it was too late to prevent injury to himself, although before going on the track, which was at night, he might have observed the approach of the train from its headlight and did not, yet where there were other parallel tracks at the crossing and a parallel track over which he had already crossed, upon which at the time a street-car with a headlight thereon was approaching from the same direction as the train, and the headlight of the train could have been mistaken for the headlight of the street-car, and where the train approached the crossing at a negligent rate of speed and there was negligence in not ringing a bell, it can not be said as a matter of law that in going upon the track he was guilty of such conduct as amounted to negligence barring a recovery. Seaboard Air-Line Railway Co. v. Sarman, 38 Ga. App. 637 (144 S. E. 810). The eases of Peeples v. Louisville & Nashville Railroad Co., 37 Ga. App. 87 (139 S. E. 85), and Cox v. Central of Georgia Railway Co., 38 Ga. App. 88 (143 S. E. 444), are distinguishable. In the Peeples case the plaintiff was at a railroad-crossing waiting for a passing train to go over the crossing, and his view of a train approaching on the track upon which he was standing was unobstructed. In the Oox case the plaintiff, who was in full possession
2. In a suit against the railroad company by the person injured, where the plaintiff’s evidence authorized the inference that the facts were as indicated above, the evidence was sufficient to establish the plaintiff’s ease as alleged in the petition, and to authorize the inference that the negligence of the defendant and not that of the plaintiff was the proximate cause of the injury, to the plaintiff’s damage as alleged. The court did not err in overruling the defendant’s motion for a nonsuit.
Judgment affirmed.