6 Ga. App. 454 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1909
Fuller, a young man 19 years old, was hurt in the switch-yards of the Georgia Eailroad in or near Atlanta. He sued the company and obtained a verdict. To the overruling of a motion for a new trial the defendant excepts. The Georgia Eailroad yards leading out from the city of Atlanta are extensive both in length and breadth. The point where the injury occurred is about in the middle of the yards, at perhaps its busiest portion. It is undisputed in the evidence that at the place of the injury were ten or twelve parallel tracks upon which trains were constantly moving by day and by night. It was here that not only the regular trains passed, but other trains were made up. At this point Carroll street comes up to the tracks on the south side and ends in a cul de sac. From the end of this street, by crossing the tracks of the Georgia Eailroad and going down a slight embankment to the tracks of the Southern Eailway and across these, and up an embankment and through one or more strands of a wire fence, one could reach Decatur street running-parallel with the tracks. The plaintiff with a companion had gone from his home on Carroll street across these tracks to Deca
The plaintiff showed that a great many people did in fact pass through these yards at this point; and that there was a beaten path across the tracks, up the embankment and under the wire fence. It was further shown that brakemen and other employees, under instructions from their superior officers, had from time to-