133 Ga. 621 | Ga. | 1909
Samuel O. Gilleland brought suit against the Georgia Bailway and Electric Company, alleging substantially as follows: On October 28, 1905, at about one o’clock a. m., plaintiff boarded an electric car of the defendant in the city of Atlanta. The route along which it was intended to pass extended eastward along Hunter street, thence turned southward along Hill street to Woodward avenue, into which it turned. Plaintiff was a passenger on the car, and with the permission and consent of the motorman and conductor, the ear being well filled, he was riding on the front platform. When the car reached the sharp curve of the defendant’s track at the corner of Hill street and Woodward avenue, the motorman, instead of decreasing the speed, negligently continued the high rate of ten or fifteen miles per hour, and the car struck the curve with great force, was derailed, and proceeded for a considerable distance after leaving the rails. It was jolting with great force, and appeared to be about to turn over. The plaintiff, seeing the derailment, and that the electricity was flashing up all around the car, started toward the step of the platform, holding on with both hands. As he reached the step the movement of the car, and the fact that the motorman ran violently against him, caused him to be thrown to the ground and seriously and permanently injured.
The plaintiff died pending the action, and his administratrix was made a party in his stead. She amended the petition by alleging, in substance, as follows: After the car crossed Fair street, which was the next cross street before reaching Woodward avenue, the motorman suddenly and negligently turned on the motive power of the car, and the full current of electricity of a high voltage passed through the controller. This caused the car to start forward at a very rapid rate of speed, and, on account of the condition of the controller and the high voltage of the current in the trolley-wire, caused the controller to “blow up,” the current to “arc” and to flare and blaze up in and around the controller stand, setting fire to the insulation and to inflammable material in and about the controller, near to which the plaintiff’s husband was standing, thus imperiling his life and safety. The motorman negligently failed to cut off the current by reversing his controller, as he could easily have done, or by means of the overhead switch, which was easily
The jury found for the plaintiff $1,500. Defendant moved for new trial, which was denied, and it excepted.
In Southwestern R. Co. v. Paulk, 24 Ga. 356, the rule is thus stated: “If, through the default of the corporation or its servants, the passenger is placed in such a perilous condition as to render it an act of reasonable precaution, for the purpose of self-preservation, to leap from the cars, the company is responsible for the injury he receives thereby; although if he had remained in the cars he would not have been injured.” .The charge of the court involved in. that case was pot criticised or apparently attacked on the ground of expressing an opinion as to what constituted negligence. In Simmons v. East Tenn., Va. & Ga. R. Co., 92 Ga. 658 (18 S. E. 999), it is said: “If by reason of the negligence of a railway company a collision of its trains becomes imminent, and an employee upon one of them, whose life is consequently exposed, is prompted by the conductor to run forward over intervening cars to give warning to the engineer, and in so doing, without imprudence or negligence on his own part, falls and is injured, the company is liable to compensate him in damages. In such case the negligence, whatever it may have been, which occasioned the perilous situation, is not
Judgment reversed.