14 Ga. App. 166 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1914
The disallowance by the court of an amendment to the petition, offered after the action had been dismissed on general demurrer, was not. erroneous; for at the time the amendment was offered there was no petition in court to be amended. The case of Sullivan v. Rome R. Co., 28 Ga. 29, cited by the plaintiff to sustain his right to amend, has no application to this case, as that was a case in which the court below first nonsuited the plaintiff, and the Supreme Court reversed this judgment and sent the case back to the court below, and the judgment of revérsal had to be carried out 'by the circuit court, and, therefore, there was a proceeding pending in the court below, subject to proper amendment at that stage of the proceeding. The cases of Green v. Massee & Fellon Lumber Co., 6 Ga. App. 389 (65 S. E. 44); and Kennedy v. Gelders, 7 Ga. App. 241 (66 S. E. 620), where the appellate cojrrt sent the eases back with leave to amend, are not in point, for the direction in those eases was to allow an amendment of something that would be pending in the court at the time of the amendment. In the present case the -petition had been dismissed, and the pro-' eeedings on it had ended before any offer to amend was made.
The original petition stated no cause of action, and the court committed no error in sustaining a general demurrer thereto. The allegations of negligence set out therein are, that the defendant company was negligent because the foreman ordered the train forward before the gang, of which plaintiff was one, had time to load the tools; that the train started before the gang had finished loading the tools; that the foreman knew, when he gave the order to start, that the tools had not been loaded; and that it was the duty of defendant to keep the train stationary while the plaintiff was loading the tools, and that the defendant was negligent in starting the train before plaintiff had got upon the train. For a conductor or foreman to order his train forward is not in itself an act of negligence. That the plaintiff and the gang with whom he was