26 Ga. App. 379 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1921
This case arises by reason of a suit to recover damages from the Federal director-general, operating the Seaboard Air-Line Railway, for alleged damage to an automobile, the property of the plaintiff. The evidence was conclusive that at Dorchester, a station on the line of railroad, there was a crossing over its track; that the track was perfectly straight for several miles, and there were no obstructions to the view; that when a regular passenger-train was due to arrive and stop at Dorchester the plaintiff, who owned a garage within a very few yards of the railroad, coupled behind his Ford car, with a chain about 15 feet long, another Ford car, and started his car in motion, towing the other car in the direction of
The verdict in favor of the plaintiff was without evidence to support it. There being no conflict in the evidence that if it had not been for the heavy load, which the plaintiff was undertaking to tow with the destroyed automobile, he would have gotten across the track before the arrival of the train, and there being no conflict in the evidence that the plaintiff knew that it was about train time, and the track was perfectly straight, so that he may have observed the train a mile or more away, if he had cared to look or listen, in our opinon he was grossly negligent in going upon the railroad track, a place of danger, with the automobile over
Judgment reversed.