52 Ga. App. 545 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1936
About 7 o’clock p. m., on August 16, 1933, the plaintiff was walking, with his head down and “in a confused state of mind,” along a railroad-track of the defendant in the City of Rossville, toward a public crossing about 150 feet ahead; and while thus in plain view of the approaching train and its operators, the plaintiff was struck by the locomotive and injured. This was in a populous section of the city, and the people thereof had been and were in the habit of using the defendant’s tracks at this point in going to and from their homes to the business part of the city, all
1. It is conceded that the plaintiff was a trespasser upon the railroad-tracks of the defendant at the time he was struck by its train and injured. “Ordinarily the only duty owing by a railway company to a trespasser -upon or about its property is not wantonly or wilfully to injury him after his presence has been discovered.” Central of Ga. Ry. Co. v. Stamps, 48 Ga. App. 309 (3) (172 S. E. 806), and cit. If the servants of the defendant were guilty of wilful and wanton negligence which resulted in plaintiff’s injury, then the plaintiff’s negligence, however gross, will not defeat a recovery for such injury. Lowe v. Payne, 156 Ga. 312 (118 S. E. 924); Pressley v. A. & W. P. R. Co., 48 Ga. App. 382 (172 S. E. 731).
2. “After the presence of a trespasser upon the track of the defendant in front of its approaching train is discovered, it becomes the duty of the agents in charge of the train to give him some warning of his dangerous position.” Even though such trespasser may not be deficient in any of his faculties, and while the agents in charge of the train have the right to conclude and act on the conclusion that such person will leave the track in time to save himself from" injury, in that they are then under no duty to check the speed of the train, yet as a matter of ordinary prudence and care, it is their duty to sound the whistle or ring the bell, as a warning of the'approaching danger. Humphries v. Southern Ry. Co., 51 Ga. App. 585, 589 (181 S. E. 135).
4. . So where it appears from the allegations of the petition that the plaintiff was walking along the tracks of the defendant, that the engineer in charge of its approaching train actually saw him on the tracks, walking with his head down towards the engine and train, in time to have rung the bell or blown the whistle and thereby attracted plaintiff’s attention to the approaching danger, and where it is charged that such conduct on the part of the engineer was wilful and wanton, and that by reason thereof the plaintiff was injured, under the facts alleged in the petition it was a question for the jury whether plaintiff made a case entitling him to recover of the defendant for his injuries. Central R. Co. v. Denson, 84 Ga. 774 (11 S. E. 1039). Humphries v. Southern Ry. Co., Pressley v. A. & W. P. R. Co., and Lowe v. Payne, supra.
5. It follows that the judge erred in dismissing plaintiff’s action, the second count of the petition setting up a case for submission to the jury on wilful and wanton negligence. The petition was not subject to any of the grounds of special demurrer.
Judgment reversed.