1 Ga. App. 393 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1907
Queen Daughtry brought suit against the railway company for $5,000, for the homicide of her husband. She alleged that he was an employee of the defendant company and was engaged in the performance of his duties as train-hand; and thatAvhile so engaged and without fault on his part, by the negligence of the defendant, its servants, agents, and employees, and by the use of the defective, rotten, and worn-out wire rope, and by the careless and negligent erection and maintaining of the guard-post, and by the negligence and careless operation of the engine, locomotive, cars, and machinery of the defendant, and by the improper and negligent use of a spur-track, and by carelessness and negligence of defendant in employing as conductor of the train a young boy who was inexperienced and incompetent, her husband was struck, knocked down, and killed; that her husband was in the performance of his duties; that but for the negligent use of said spur-track, guard-post, and rotten and defective wire-rope^ the careless and negligent.stopping of the engine, the incompetency and
The evidence in this case was conflicting. It may truthfully be said that a verdict would have been authorized for either party. A large number of witnesses unimpeached (except by the conflict which their testimony created) sustained by their testimony the contentions of each party. We are compelled to leave the finding of the jury undisturbed. The jury had the exclusive right to say what was the truth with reference to the catastrophe in which the-plaintiff’s husband lost his life, — whether his death was caused by the negligence of the railroad company and its servants, or whether bjr his own carelessness he forfeited his life. From its first decision upon that subject, Davis v. Kirkland, ante, 5, it has been the unanimous opinion of this court that the verdicts of juries upon the facts (if the conclusion reached is honestly attained and warranted in any view of the evidence) are entitled to even more than the highest respect and consideration of the court. Not only this, but that parties who fairly gain such verdicts have a property right therein, of which they should not be deprived. And furthermore, that this court is clothed with no power to set verdicts aside. The errors for which a new trial should be granted, where there is evidence to support the verdict, have been alluded to in Crankshaw v. Schweizer Mfg. Co., ante, 363. The error must be such as induced or largely contributed to the erroneous finding,