112 Ga. 96 | Ga. | 1900
J. N. Hooper brought suit for $1,985 damages, in the/ city court of Floyd county, against the Southern Railway Company. In his petition for a recovery he alleged substantially the following facts: Petitioner is the father of Charles B. Hooper,' aminor, born December 23, 1882, and as such parent is entitled to the services of his son during minority. In June, 1898, his son was in good health, a strong, vigorous boy, and his services were worth to petitioner $15 a month, and the value of his services would have increased as he grew older. Defendant’s railroad runs through petitioner’s farm in said county. There is also a wagon-road running through said farm and crossing defendant’s railway upon said farm. As the wagon-road approaches the railroad, it passes over a bridge built by defendant over one of its ditches, the bridge being seven feet high, eleven feet long, and seven and a half feet wide. The bridge forms a part of the approach to the railroad, and is entirely upon defendant’s right of way. This wagon-road has been
Counsel for plaintiff in error cite the case of Anderson v. R. R. Co., 9 Daly (N. Y.), 487, where that court held: “ In an action by a father to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by him from injuries to his infant son, arising from the negligence of the defendant, a former judgment in favor of the son, in an action by him, suing by his guardian ad litem, against the same defendant, for damages for the same injuries, may properly be alleged in the complaint and given in evidence, to establish that such injuries were caused solely by the defendant’s negligence; and will be sufficient proof of that fact, if the record shows that it was so determined in that action.” In the case at bar the petition of the plaintiff has no allegation whatever of a former suit by the son, and no notice is given by the pleadings, therefore, that the plaintiff was relying upon the verdict and judgment in the former case being conclusive against the defendant on any issue involved in this trial; nor is there anything in this, record to indicate that the jury had determined on the first trial that the injuries to the minor were caused solely by defendant’s negligence. The decision, therefore, in the New York case has not an exact application to the case we are' now considering; for there the judgment in favor of the son it seems was properly pleaded, that is, set out in the declaration or complaint, and the motion was simply to strike that part of the complaint. The trial court refused to strike it, and the appellate court affirmed that refusal. This is the full extent of that decision. In the case at bar, no reference is made in the petition to the suit of the son, and there being nothing in the pleadings to put the court upon notice that there had been such a judgment, we think it was properly rejected. In the opinion of Chief Justice Daly in the New York case above cited, p. 488, he says:
Another ground in the motion for a new trial was, that the court refused to allow the plaintiff to read the testimony of W. J. Shaw, taken on the trial of the suit by the son against the defendant, the testimony being to the effect that the witness was a physician, and examined the son as a patient, and giving some testimony touching the extent of the injury. The motion recites the fact that this witness died since the trial of the first case. Civil Code, § 5186,
Judgment affirmed.