118 Ga. 535 | Ga. | 1903
The plaintiff recovered a verdict against the railway-company, for injuries alleged to have been received as a result of the negligence' of the defendant in suddenly and improperly starting the train while the plaintiff was in the act of alighting therefrom at a station to which he as a passenger had paid the defendant to carry him. The defendant's motion for a new trial was overruled, and it excepted. This is the second appearance of this case in this court. See Central My. Co.v. McKenney, 116 Ga. 13.
One of the grounds of the motion is subject to the criticism that it complains of one sound proposition of law because the court failed to give in connection therewith another principle of law equally sound and pertinent to the case. See Central Railway Co. v. Grady, 113 Ga. 1046, and cases cited. Further complaint is made that the court charged the jury, in substance, that if the plaintiff disembarked from the train over the protest of the conductor, it would be for them to say whether, under all the circumstances the conduct of the plaintiff was such as to prevent a recovery. It is contended that there could be no recovery if the plaintiff voluntarily jumped from the train over the protest of the conductor. The test is, not whether the conductor protested or failed to protest, but whether the plaintiff’s act was so negligent as to prevent a recovery. The fact that the conductor protested might be ground ■for assuming that the plaintiff’s act was imprudent and dangerous, but the protest alone would certainly not prevent a recovery. There is also an exception to the entire charge, on the ground that it failed to present the issues fully and to fairly and accurately state the law applicable to those issues. We do not think the charge is subject to this criticism. The other requests to charge were, so far
Judgment affirmed.