28 Ga. App. 160 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1922
1. A witness may, from observing a child, testify as to his judgment of the child’s age; the probative value of such evidence being for the jury.
2. In a suit in behalf of an infant to recover damages for personal injuries received by him while employed in a mill of the defendant, where the petition alleged that the infant was at the time of the injury under the age of fourteen years and was injured by reason of being employed by the defendant in violation of the child-labor law, there was evidence sufficient to authorize the inference that the infant was at the time of the injury over fourteen years of age, where the time of the injury was a year and four and a half months prior to the date of the trial, and where the superintendent of the mill, a witness for the defendant, testified at the trial that he did not, at the time when the infant was employed to work in the mill, form any judgment as to the infant’s age, but in his testimony said, “ I judge his age now to be about sixteen years old.” This evidence authorized the inference that at the time of the injury — a year and four and a half months previous — the infant
3. The remaining exceptions to the charge of the court are without merit.
4. The court erred in overruling the defendant’s motion for a new'trial.
Judgment reversed.