40 Ga. App. 341 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1929
L. L. Shaw instituted suit against Georgia Railway & Power Company, to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been received by him and caused by the negligence of the defendant in the operation of its street-car along its track in a public street in the City of Atlanta and running into the plaintiff while he was standing by the side of the track engaged in placing
As counsel for the plaintiff in error in their brief virtually concede that the evidence supports the verdict found for the plaintiff, but insist that, in view of the nature of the evidence and the size of the verdict, the alleged errors could not have been harmless, it is unnecessary to review the evidence or to refer to it otherwise than to state that it presented issues of fact as to the negligence both of the plaintiff and the defendant, and authorized the inference that the defendant was negligent and that this negligence proximately contributed to the plaintiff’s injury, and that the verdict in the amount found for the plaintiff was authorized by the evidence.
The court having charged that a presumption of liability arises upon proof that an injury results from the operation of the cars of a railway company, as provided in section 3780 of the Civil Code of 1910, further stated in the charge as follows: “This presumption of law, gentlemen, is not a conclusive presumption; it is what is known as a rebuttable presumption. That means that upon proof of injury, as stated, it is not conclusive, but may be rebutted by evidence offered by the defendant, or the evidence submitted by the plaintiff; or from,a consideration of all the evidence. If it does appear from the evidence that the agents of the company have exercised all ordinary and reasonable care and diligence, then this presumption would be rebutted, and you would not regard this presumption, but would proceed to consider the case on the allegations of negligence made by the plaintiff and [or] the answer of the defendant. These allegations and the answer form the issue which you are to try.” Exception is made to this charge as being error in that it in effect states that, if this presumption has been rebutted by evidence, to the satisfaction of the jury that the agents of the defendant had exercised the required care and diligence, this presumption should be disregarded, and the jury should proceed “to consider the case on the allegations of negligence made'by the plaintiff and [on] the answer of the defendant.”
If the jury must have understood from the excerpt excepted to that if they concluded from the evidence that the defendant street-railway company, through its agents, had exercised the required care and diligence, then the jury should proceed further to a consideration of the case on the allegations of negligence made by the plaintiff, and the answer of the defendant, the excerpt would have conveyed to the jury an erroneous impression as to the law. If the jury had concluded that the defendant had exercised the required care and diligence, and therefore was not negligent, a verdict for the defendant would have been demanded as a matter of law, and there would necessarily have been no duty resting upon the jury to give any consideration to the allegations of negligence made by the plaintiff, although these allegations may have been supported by the evidence. The jury should find for the defendant. If the charge was understood by the jury as stating that, upon the introduction of evidence which authorized the inference that the agents of the defendant company had exercised the required care and diligence, the presumption of liability which had arisen upon proof that the injury resulted from the operation of the defendant’s streetcar would disappear from the case, and there would then be no presumption against the defendant, it would then have been the duty of the jury to proceed further to a consideration of the case “on the allegations of negligence made by the plaintiff and [or| the answer of the defendant,” as instructed by the court, provided there was any evidence to the contrary which would authorize an inference that the defendant had failed to exercise the required care and diligence and was therefore guilty of negligence proximately causing the injury complained of.
The expression “rebutting,” or the “rebuttal” of, a presumption is often used with a twofold signification, one in the sense of estab
The fact that a person has been injured by the operation of the cars of a railroad company does not authorize an inference that the damage resulted from the company’s negligence, to the exclusion of an inference that the damage resulted from the negligence of the person injured. The presumption of liability for a damage which arises upon proof that the damage resulted from the operation of the cars or locomotives of a railroad company is purely a presumption of law'created by statute. “The peculiar effect of [such a presumption] is,” as stated by Professor Wigmore in his work on Evidence, vol. 5 (2d ed), § 2491, “merely to invoke a rule of law compelling the jury to reach the conclusion in the absence of evidence to the contrary from the opponent. If the opponent does offer evidence to the contrary (sufficient to satisfy the judge’s requirement of some evidence), the presumption disappears as a rule of law, and the case is in the jury’s hands free from any rule.” In Greenleaf on Evidence, vol. 1 (15th ed), § 33, it is stated that “the law defines the nature and amount of the evidence which it deems sufficient to establish a prima facie case, and to throw the burden of proof on the other party; and, if no opposing evidence is offered, the jury are bound to find in favor of the presumption.” In 22 Corpus Juris, p. 124, § 61, it is stated in the text that “it is
There are decisions, however, which hold that, although rebuttal testimony has been introduced, a so-called “presumption” is still given the force and effect of evidence. See Pacific Portland Cement Co. v. Reinecke, 30 Cal. App. 501 (108 Pac. 1041); Rauer’s Collection Co. v. Harrell, 32 Cal. App. 45 (162 Pac. 125); Clifford v. Taylor, 204 Mass. 358 (90 N. E. 862). These cases are perhaps distinguishable upon the ground that the “presumption” referred to is onty the inference of fact which, as a matter of reasoning is ' arrived at from another and established fact, and is not the presumption created by law from an established fact where this latter fact in itself contains no element which by any process of reasoning the additional fact which is presumed can be legitimately arrived at by a mental inference, as, for instance, a presumption of liability arising from proof of air injury resulting from the operation of a railroad train, which proven fact is insufficient to authorize by a process of reasoning the additional fact that the railroad company rather than the person injured was guilty of negligence. See 5 Wigmore on Evidence (2d ed.), § 2491.
While the excerpt excepted to is perhaps susceptible to the construction that it must have instructed the jury that if they believed that the defendant exercised the required care and diligence, and was therefore not negligent, they should nevertheless proceed further to consider the ease on the allegations of negligence made by the plaintiff, it is also susceptible to the construction that it instructed the jury that upon the mere introduction of evidence showing that the defendant exercised the required care and diligence
If the statute of this State with reference to the presumption of liability against a railroad company upon proof that the injury resulted from the operation of the company’s cars or locomotives, as contained in section 2780 of the Civil Code of 1910, is properly construed as providing that, after the introduction in evidence of testimony tending to rebut this presumption, the presumption still has the force and effect of evidence, then it would have been error for the judge of the superior court to have instructed the jury that, after such evidence had been introduced, the presumption of liability should be disregarded. This statute has never to our knowledge been given this construction by the Supreme Court of this State. In Georgia Southern & Florida Railway Co. v. Sanders, 111 Ga. 128 (36 S. E. 458), the Supreme Court of Georgia recognizes the rule that where evidence rebutting the presumption of liability against the railroad company has been introduced the presumption is destroyed. There it was held that “ Such presumption, however, may be rebutted; and when the evidence of the engineer and fireman on the locomotive which struck the animal is to the effect that she came upon the track suddenly and immediately in front of the locomotive, and that all reasonable care and ordinary diligence was used to prevent striking the animal, but without avail, such presumption is successfully rebutted; and when there is no evidence disproving or tending to disprove this evidence of the trainmen, the owner is not entitled to recover.” [Italics ours.] See also Seaboard Air-Line Railway v. Walthour, 117 Ga. 427 (43 S. E. 720); Western & Atlantic Railroad v. Henderson, 167 Ga. 22 (144 S. E. 905); Civil Code (1910), § 5749. It has been held by that court in a number of cases that, where the evidence demands the inference that the railroad company had exercised the required care and diligence, a verdict for the defendant railroad company is, as a matter of law, demanded. Georgia Railroad &c. Co. v. Wall, 80 Ga. 202 (7 S. E. 639); South Carolina &c. R. Co. v. Powell, 108 Ga. 437 (33 S. E. 994); Georgia Southern &c. R. Co. v. Sanders, supra; Georgia Southern &c. R. Co. v. Thompson, 111 Ga. 731 (36
While the case of Western & Atlantic Railroad Co. v. Henderson, decided by the Supreme Court of the United States, supra, which declared unconstitutional, as in violation of the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment, the Georgia statute creating a presumption of liability against railroads, as codified in section 2780 of the Civil Code of 1910, upon the ground that this statute has been construed by the courts of Georgia “as permitting the presumption of negligence thereby created to be given the effect of evidence, to be weighed against opposing testimony, and to prevail unless such testimony is found by the jury to preponderate,” may be authority binding upon the courts of Georgia as declaring the statute, as codified in section 2780 of the Civil Code of 1910, unconstitutional, it is not authority binding upon the courts of this State, in so far as it undertakes to state historically the construction which the courts of Georgia have placed upon this statute. What the courts of Georgia have held as-respects this statute is not a federal question, but is a pure question of fact to be determinable from an inspection and construction of the decisions of the courts of Georgia themselves. This fact can be determined by us without reference to anything said by any other court. In the margin to the report of the case of Western & Atlantic Railroad Co. v. Henderson, supra, decided by the Supreme Court of the United States, appear the following Georgia cases, which are cited as authority for the proposition that upon the introduction in evidence by a railroad company of testimony in rebuttal of the presumption of liability arising upon proof that the injury resulted from the operation of locomotives or cars of the defendant railroad company, this presumption is not destroyed: Western & Atlantic R. Co. v. Thompson, 38 Ga. App. 599 (144 S. E. 831); Western & Atlantic R. Co. v. Dobbs, 36 Ga. App. 516 (137 S. E. 407); Central of Ga. Ry. Co. v. Barnett, 35 Ga. App. 528 (134 S. E. 126); Payne v. Wells, 28 Ga. App. 29 (109 S. E. 926); Central of Ga. Ry. Co. v. Hartley, 25 Ga. App. 110 (103 S. E. 259); Ga. Ry. &
In Georgia Southern & Florida Railway Co. v. Converse, 29 Ga. App. 411 (116 S. E. 20), which was not referred to by the Supreme Court of the United States in Western & Atlantic Eailroad Co. v. Henderson, supra, there is language which might be taken as indicating that, after a defendant railroad company has introduced testimoiry in rebuttal of the statutor]r presumption of liability, the presumption still may be given the force and effect of evidence. If Georgia Southern & Florida R. Co. v. Converse lays down this rule, it gives effect to a statutory rule which, under the authority of the Supreme Court of the United States in Western & Atlantic R. Co. v. Henderson, supra, is unconstitutional. It is also unsound in principle, and is unsupported by any Georgia authorities.
We do not hold that the presumption statute, as codified in section 2780 of the Civil Code of 1910, notwithstanding the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in Western & Atlantic Railroad v. Henderson, supra, giving it a construction and declaring it unconstitutional, still has any force and effect as a statute with a different construction placed upon it. This, however, is a
After the rendition of the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in Western & Atlantic Railroad Co. v. Henderson, supra, declaring unconstitutional the Georgia statute with reference
In a suit to recover damages for personal injuries, a charge that the plaintiff was “not bound to assume that the defendant would be negligent,” and “that when the law required diligence on the part of the defendant, the plaintiff would not be expected to assume that the defendant would be negligent,” is not subject to the exception that it withdrew from the consideration of the jury the question as to whether the plaintiff was negligent in failing to anticipate the negligence of the defendant, where the court immediately following this charge, and in the same connection, instructed the jury that “a person is not expected to exercise care and diligence to avoid the negligence of another until the negligence of such other person is in existence or apparent, or by the exercise of ordinary care such negligence could have been discovered,” and that “where negligence is known to exist, or in the exercise of the required care should be known, then a duty arises requiring, a person to avoid such negligence . . ,” and that whether the parties had “performed their respective duties” was a question for the jury, and where the court elsewhere in the charge further instructed the jury that all questions of negligence were for their determination.
While the duty which rests upon a plaintiff to avoid the consequences of the defendant’s negligence is twofold, and depends conjunctively both upon the plaintiff’s knowledge of the existence of the defendant’s negligence and [not “or”] also, in the absence of this knowledge, upon the plaintiff’s ability, in the exercise of
Where, for the purpose of discrediting a statement made in the testimony of a particular witness, he had been interrogated on cross-examination respecting an alleged extrajudicial statement made by him contradictory of a statement testified to by him, the admission in evidence afterwards, on the redirect examination, of the testimony of the witness that he had on several occasions extrajudieially made to other people the same statement which he had testified to and concerning which it had been sought on cross-examination to discredit him, was, if error upon 'any ground, harmless in this ease to the defendant, and not of sufficient gravity to demand a new trial.
Where a witness for the defendant street-car company had testified that he was in the rear of the street-car looking through the front vestibule, and saw the accident, it was not error for the court to permit this witness on cross-examination to testify as to the number of people that were sitting in the defendant’s street-car at the time of the alleged accident, where this evidence was admitted solely for the purpose of showing that the people in the street-car might have obstructed the witness’s view.
The admission in evidence of the testimony of a witness as
The evidence authorized the verdict in the amount found for the plaintiff, and no error appears.
Judgment affirmed.