88 Ga. 71 | Ga. | 1891
Judgment affirmed.
Ivy sued the railway company for damages from personal injuries. After'the introduction of the testimony for the plaintiff, nonsuit was granted, and the plaintiff excepted.
The plaintiff testified : He went, at night between 9 and 10 o’clock, to where Victoria street in the city of Atlanta crosses a number of railroad tracks, approaching the crossing from the north side. He did not see any train at all while coming across the track, except a switch-engine which was on the south side making switches. He looked both ways. He stood there about twenty minutes waiting for the train, which was across the main crossing and a very long train, to pull up. It did not seem to get across the crossing. It made two or three switches as it pulled on up towards the freight-depot. He went on, starting towards the switchman, coming from near the end of the train west of the crossing. The switchman holloed, “Look out,” and there was at that time a train coming in front of witness, the switch-engine being right by the side of him, and he watching tire train in front. The switchman holloed again and the third time, and by that time witness looked back and saw a. train was very nearly on him, and jumped, and before his feet could hit the ground the train threw him. This was on the main line, the Georgia Pacific track, which was used both by that road and by defendant. It was about fifty or sixty feet from the crossing. Witness does not know what engine hit him. He did not hear anything but the noise of the train, and heard that all the time because the other train was pulling up towards the depot, and the train that was going that way he did not pay any attention to, because he knew it had passed him. The train that
The switchman testified for plaintiff: It was the pilot of one of defendant’s engines which struck plaintiff. "Witness saw the plaintiff about three minutes before, and plaintiff was going between the number one side-track and the main line, walking on the end of the ties, right by the side of the track. Witness’s train (Georgia Pacific) was in motion at the same time coming back on number one side-track. Both of the trains were in motion. Plaintiff' “ aimed” to go around by witness and witness holloed to him to “ look out.” If he had come around where witness was, witness’s train would have caught him. There was a W. & A. switch-engine right across the track, blowing off' steam, and
Plaintiff' also put in evidence as to the extent of his injuries, earnings, age, etc., and an ordinance of the city to the effect that any engineer or other person in charge of an engine, with or without cars attached, who should run the same through any part of the city at a greater rate of speed than six miles an hour, should, on conviction, be punished in a manner prescribed in the ordinance.