59 Ga. 593 | Ga. | 1877
The action was for a personal injury. There was no dispute that the plaintiff, while lying upon the defendant’s track, was run over by a train of cars, and that from hurts inflicted thereby he sustained some damage. The question was upon the negligence of the parties, respectively. Upon that, the evidence was substantially as follows: The plaintiff had drank some whisky, and was traveling the public road on foot. At a point where the public road and the railroad crossed each other, he was taken with a swimming in the head, became insensible, and knew nothing more until after he had been carried on the train to a neighboring station. The train consisted of an engine and five cars. It was running on schedule time and at the speed of twenty miles per hour when it reached the “ blow post,” four hundred yards from the crossing. Just as the engineer commenced to blow at the post, the fireman discovered something on the track a little beyond the crossing. He, supposed it to be a hog killed by another train, and so stated to the engineer. When within one hundred and twenty-five, or one hundred and fifty yards of the crossing, it be
The testimony came from three witnesses — the plaintiff, the fireman, and the person who heard the blowing from" his position in the public road. The engineer was not examined. It must be matter of reasoning, therefore, as to when he became aware, or might, by proper diligence, have" become aware that the object upon the track was a man. The true condition of the plaintiff was. also matter of reasoning, from all the' facts and circumstances. It is not a necessary inference from the evidence that he was drunk, or that his powers failed from the use of whisky, and not from a sudden access of disease. Such an inference might be drawn by a jury, or it might not. One great fact is manifest — that is, that the law was violated in not check-" ing “and keep checking” the speed of the locomotive, .from the post to the crossing. Code, section U38. As the plaintiff had wandered out of the public road, and was not
As to when a non-suit is or is not proper, see 5 Ga., 171; 7 Ib., 465; 12 Ib., 45, 424; 15 Ib., 491; 16 Ib., 154; 17 Ib., 601; 18 Ib., 401; 56 Ib., 275; 8 Ib., 292; 11 Ib., 283; 12 Ib., 105; 17 Ib., 574; 20 Ib., 480.
Cited by counsel: 35 N. Y., 9; Thomp. on Highways, 306; Code, §§708, 711, 2066, 3033; 24 Ga., 75; 43 Ib., 332; 53 Ib., 16; 38 Ib., 409.
Judgment reversed.