5 Ga. App. 532 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1909
A railroad company is not required to use extraordinary diligence for the safety of one who boards a train at a regular station, without having made any effort to procure a ticket, and who, after entering the car, does not inform any of the carrier’s servants as ito the point to which he desires to be carried, and neither offers to pay his fare nor in any other way calls the attention of the conductor or any other servant of the carrier in charge of the train to his presence, and who only intends to ride to a street-crossing in the city in which, he entered the train, at which crossing the particular train is not accustomed to stop, and who, without notifying any of the train crew of his intention to leave the train and without asking that it be slowed, attempts to alight therefrom at such a street-crossing. If, in the effort to alight, such a. one is injured by a sudden jerk or quickening of the speed of the train, no action for the injury can be maintained