93 Ga. 570 | Ga. | 1894
In this case a new trial should have been granted because, under the facts in evidence, the plaintiff was not entitled to a recovery.
The freight-train upon which the plaintiff was a conductor having stopped for some reason, he started forward to ascertain from’the engineer the cause of the stop, at the same time sending a flagman back on the track with a red light for the purpose of warning a train which was following in his rear Before the conductor reached the engineer, the latter started fhe train, when, by the breaking of a link, it came apart, and the rear portion, upon which the conductor then was, began to roll backwards down the track, and in so doing, passed the flagman already mentioned. The conductor, by applying the brakes, succeeded in stopping the detached portion of the train, and then undertook to go back on the track himself for the purpose of warning the approaching train in time to avoid a collision. • That train was not then in sight. The track, in the direction from which the train was approaching, was perfectly straight for a mile or more, and the headlight of an approaching engine could, without difficulty, have been seen for a considerable distance, although it was a dark and rainy night. In going back to signal this train, the conductor started across a trestle in great haste, and when about half way across, he stepped on a cross-tie on the top of which was a small bit of decayed sap, which slipped off or came loose from the tie, causing him to fall and to become seriously injured. The flagman already mentioned was the only train-hand the
The above, in brief, sets forth the substantial facts of the case. The 'declaration alleged that the coming apart of the train resulted from the engineer’s negligence, and that the company was also negligent in having a defective cross-tie in the trestle.
Granting that the engineer was negligent as charged, we do not think this negligence was, under the circumstances, the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injury. After the breaking of the link between two of the cars, the rolling back of those cars which were thus detached was a distinct and intervening cause scarcely to have been foreseen, but which made it necessary for the conductor, after stopping these cars, to go down the track with his lantern to signal the coming train. Again, after he had gotten down from the cars upon the track, his hasty and rapid progress over the trestle was yet another cause which brought about the accident resulting in his injury; while the real and immediate cause of this accident was the slipping of his foot upon the cross-tie, because of the giving way of the little piece of decayed sap upon its edge. "We therefore think the alleged negligence of the engineer, if it existed at all, was entirely too remote to be treated as the cause of the plaintiff’s injury. This being so, he had no cause of action against the company, unless it was negligent in allowing the cross-tie in question to remain in the trestle with the bit of decayed sap upon it. Relatively to the plaintiff, we do not think this was negligence. It did not appear that this cross-tie was not otherwise sound and in all respects sufficient and suitable for the
We have not stated or discussed the numerous grounds of the motion for a new trial, because the views above expressed cover the merits of the case, and render it unnecessary to go into further detail.
The case mainly relied on by counsel for the defendant in error was that of Simmons v. East Tennessee, Virginia and Georgia Railway Company, decided last term. 92 Ga. 658. That case is distinguishable from the case at bar in several particulars. In the Simmons case, the trial court held that the declaration did not set forth a cause of action, and therefore, for the purpose of deciding the question thus raised, the allegations of the declaration were assumed to be true. According to those allegations, the negligence of the engineer was the direct and immediate cause of bringing about the situation requiring prompt action on the part of the plaintiff'. In the present case, the negligence of the engineer, if there was any, was the remote, and not the proximate, cause which made it necessary for the plaintiff' to adopt a certain line of conduct. Again, in the former case, the negligence of the engineer occasioned a real emergency, which not only put in imminent danger the prop
Judgment reversed.