88 Ga. 726 | Ga. | 1892
Lead Opinion
Judgment affirmed on main bill; cross-bill dismissed.
Action by the widow of Dowdy for damages from his homicide by the railroad company. She excepted to the grant of a nonsuit, and to the ruling out of testi
The declaration alleged that on July 1, 1890, at the time Dowdy was killed, he was on his way to the defendant’s depot at Union Point, intending there to take its train as a passenger to Athens, a station on its line, of road, and in order to reach the depot he had to walk down its road-bed between the main line track and a siding, the space between these tracks being the pass-way for passengers to use in approaching the depot, and the only way provided by the defendant for approaching its depot by persons residing in that portion of Union Point where Dowdy resided; that this space or pass-way had been used by the public for over thirty years, with the full knowledge and consent of the defendant, and was as much frequented as any thoroughfare in the village; that the defendant had invited and encouraged the use of this walk, or passway, by the public, in placing steps at that end of its depot for the convenience of persons coming from that direction intending to board its train, and by placing at intervals crossings leading to this passway, for the use and convenience of such persons; that it was necessary for Dowdy, in order to reach the depot, to cross one of the tracks next to it, and he was in the act of doing so when, without any fault or negligence on his part, he was knocked down and killed by . the engine and cars of the defendant, which ran rapidly upon him from his rear until they were so close when discovered-that he, not being aware of their approach, was unable to avoid the injury ; that said injury was caused by the rapid and reckless running of the defendant’s train known as the “ fast train,” its speed being twenty-five or thirty miles per hour at a point near the depot; that the defendant’s servants neglected and failed to blow the whistle or toll the bell of the locomotive, and to simultaneously check and keep
The testimony was, in substance, as follows : Dowdy was seen going down the railroad track in the direction of the depot; said he was in a hurry as he was going off on the train to Athens. He was killed beyond the public crossing, between the crossing and the depot. The blow-post before reaching the crossing is situated just in front of the house of a witness who saw the train that killed Dowdy as it passed her house; was attracted to the right of way because she heard the train blow about a mile off'. She did not hear the train blow or the bell ring, nor could she tell that the train was slackened on approaching the crossing. The train slackened its speed just before reaching the mossing, but it was running at the rate of twenty-five miles an hour at the crossing. It was the fast train of the defendant, running on the Athens branch. There was no public road or street on either side of the railroad. Dowdy was walking down the track that is used by the people living in that portion of Hnion Point. This track is frequented as much as any street at Hnion Point. The railroad authorities have prepared foot-crossings for the people to use in approaching the depot; Dowdy was killed within thirty or forty yards of one of these crossings. He lived about a quarter of a mile
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. Where a footman in daylight, at a place used by the public as a passway for thirty years, steps upon a railroad track in front of an engine, but long enough to walk upon the track thirty feet before he is run down and killed, it is a question for the jury whether it was wantonness in the engineer not to give a signal for him to get off.