129 Ga. 115 | Ga. | 1907
(After stating the facts.) The special demurrer to the petition, as amended, raises numerous questions. We all ■agree that some of the grounds of the special demurrer were not well taken. We are not agreed as to the proper decision of other
In the present case the allegation that the deceased was free from fault was an unnecessary averment. As it was unnecessary, the defendant certainly had no right to require any elaboration of the averment or any more detail in reference tó the unnecessary allegation than the plaintiff saw fit to offer. If the case had been of a character where the averment was a necessary part of the plaintiff’s ease, then the defendant might have been entitled to more information as to the matter. The office of a special demurrer is to call for information which the defendant is entitled to have under the law. If the plaintiff makes an unnecessary allegation, the right of the defendant is generally either to have it stricken or require it to be proved, if the averment is 'of such a character as to be descriptive of the transaction in question. The
On the remaining questions which will be specially dealt with we are not agreed; and the views of the majority of the court will be stated as well as the views of the dissenting members. The special demurrer to the petition as amended raises the question that -it did not show whether the deceased was walking, sitting, standing or lying upon the track, nor did it show any duty of diligence on the part of the defendant to the plaintiff’s husband, nor what degree of diligence was owed, nor did it appear that the plaintiff’s husband was at or upon a public-road crossing or so near thereto as rendered the failure on the part of the defendant to observe the statutory signals required at such places negligence
Judgment reversed.