Lead Opinion
(Aftеr stating the foregoing facts.) Where stock is killed by the running of the cars of a rаilroad company,- and there is some evidence other than the рresumption' against the company, authorizing the jury to find that the employees in charge of the train were negligent and that the killing was the result of that nеgligence, a verdict against the railroad company should not be disturbed. Negligence, like any other fact, may be " established by circumstantial еvidence as well as by direct evidence. In Southern Railway Co. V. Carter, 139 Ga. 237 (
In the instant ease the plaintiff’s right to recover did not rest solely upon the statutory presumption of negligence, but there was direct evidence as well as circumstantial, as shown by the record,
Judgment affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. ¡ In my opinion the evidence for the plaintiff, beyond showing that his mule was injured by the running оf a train of the defendant (and thus raising the statutory presumption of negligenсe against the defendánt), was without any probative value whatever. The undisрuted evidence of the engineer, and the other employees of the defendant, upon the train which struck the mule, completely rebutted this рresumption of negligence, and the'recovery for the plaintiff ’ was unauthorized. I think the court erred in overruling the motion for a new trial. Georgia Railroad & Banking Co. v. Wall, 80 Ga. 202 (
