13 Ga. App. 124 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1913
The plaintiff sought to recover of the street railway company damages for alleged personal injuries. The allegations of the petition made substantially the following case: Broad street is one of the main public thoroughfares in the City of Augusta, running approximately east and west. About three o’clock in the afternoon the plaintiff started to cross Broad street from the south side thereof to watch out for one of the defendant’s street-cars going westward up Broad street. When about two feet from the track and looking eastward along Broad street to discover the approach of the car for which he was watching, one of the defendant’s ears came down Broad street, going in an easterly direction, and, suddenly and without any warning to the plaintiff, struck him, knocking him to the ground, as a result of which he sustained serious injuries. He was in full view of the motorman in charge of the car, and by the exercise of ordinary diligence his presence could have been discovered and warning given him of the approach of the ear, but the motorman failed to keep a lookout so as to discover his presence. The plaintiff was without fault, and his injuries were the result of the defendant’s negligence in failing to discover his presence and give him warning of the approach of the car, and in failing to stop the car in order to avoid striking him. By amendment it was alleged, that just prior to the time when he was struck by the car, the plaintiff looked up the track in the direction from whence the car came and saw only one ear, which passed him. He then stepped near the track to look for the ear which was to come up the street westward. It was raining and he could not by the exercise of ordinary diligence have
It being alleged that the plaintiff was in full view of the defendant’s motorman, and that the motorman negligently failed to heep on the lookout to discover his presence, or, if his presence was discovered, failed to give any warning of the approach of the car, the petition charges negligence sufficiently to withstand a motion to dismiss. By way of defense the company is entitled to the benefit of the rule that generally, “if a person be seen upon the track, who is apparently capable of taking care of himself, the motorman may assume that he will leave the track before the car reaches him; •and this presumption may be indulged so long as the danger of injuring him does not become imminent, but no longer.” Perry v. Macon Consolidated St. R. Co., supra. But there is nothing in the allegations of the petition which authorized the court to apply this principle in the defendant’s favor and hold, as a matter of law, that upon its application the plaintiff was not entitled to recover. Whether the plaintiff’s position was such as to authorize the motorman to assume that he could and would leave his perilous position, and whether the motorman was negligent in‘failing to give him warning of the approach of the car, were questions of fact to be settled by the jury.
Questions of negligence are peculiarly for the jury. It is rare that the court can say as a matter of law that a given state of facts demands a finding that the person was guilty of such negligence as would authorize a recovery of damages against him, or of such negligence as would defeat a recovery of damages on account of negligence of another person. It is equally difficult for the court to hold as a matter of law that one party was guilty of a greater quantum of negligence than another where the injury resulted from the concurrent negligence of both.- In most cases it is for the jury to compare the negligence of the respective parties and determine which preponderates. From the exhaustive and well-prepared brief of counsel for defendant in error, it is apparent that the trial judge dismissed the petition mainly upon the ground that the plaintiff could by the exercise of ordinary care have avoided the consequences of the defendant’s negligence, and that his injury was attributable to his failure to exercise due care for his own safety. We think this issue should not have been resolved against the plaintiff as a matter of law, but rather that the question should have been submitted to the jury to be determined by them as an issue of fact. Let it be conceded that the plaintiff was negligent in taking a position near the defendant company’s track along
Judgment reversed.