27 Ga. 358 | Ga. | 1859
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
It is said that the verdict in this case, cannot be justified on legal principles, and so the presiding .fudge seemed to think. That if the jury found for the plaintiff, they were bound to find a larger sum. Is this so?
There was a principle referred to in the case of the Wynn girl, against the Macon and Western Rail Road Co., decided at the July Term, 1858, of this Court, at this place, which
We doubt not, however, that the jury thought of this transaction as we do; that the fault was wholly on the part of this wild and wayward girl. A heavy rain was impending, and the dray of the defendant having flour and meal on board, was hurrying at a rapid trot, to escape. The street was some two hundred feet wide. The little girl ran out forty-nine feet from the side-walk; passed in front of the dray, just clearing the heads of the mules; the movement was voluntary and intentional; it was in proof by the plaintiff’s own witnesses, (the defendant introduced none,) that she was in the habit of doing these things; that the fact had been communicated to her parents, and they had been warned, that if they did not restrain her, she would be hurt; the next that was seen of her she was down between the front and hind wheels of the dray, on the opposite side from the one from which she approached the vehicle ; and the hind wheel ran over her, inflicting a considerable injury upon her head and body; how she came there does not appear; whether she was attempting to get into the dray, or swing to it, or what, we cannot tell.
Can persons throw themselves across a rail-road track,
The conduct of children must be controlled; the failure to do this, is the curse and ruin of this country, and if parents will not do it, it is a misfortune that the lesson has to be enforced by such catastrophes as the present.
Judgment reversed.