9 Ga. App. 497 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1911
Thus much of the facts «nay be stated as being undisputed : The plaintiff, an old negro woman, was a passenger on a street-car. The conductor demanded fare of a negro man, who replied that he had paid once and would not pay again. The dispute waged throughout a few short exchanges of words, when the conductor struck the man. The conflict in the testimony is as to whether the plaintiff was injured or not. The plaintiff testified that the conductor knocked the man down upon her, and thereby inflicted severe injuries upon her person; and her testimony is corroborated by those who saw the fresh physical signs upon her shortly after the occurrence. Several witnesses testified, for the defendant, that, while the conductor struck the man, he did not knock him down upon the plaintiff, but knocked him in another direction. The jury found a small verdict for the plaintiff. The defendant assigns as error the following instruction of the court to the jury: “If. in the dispute ahout the paying of the fare, the conductor was trying to got the fare, and the passenger used opprobrious words or abusive language to the conductor, and the conductor was justified in hitting him on account of such' language, -then the railroad company would not be liable, provided it used as to this plaintiff that extraordinary .diligence which the law required him to use. While he might he justified in striking the passenger that he was in the fuss with, still he would not be justified in hurting this passenger, the plaintiff in .this case, unless he still was in the exercise of that extreme care and caution which a prudent man would exercise under the same or similar circumstances.”