120 Ga. 347 | Ga. | 1904
After the plaintiff had stopped his train heyond the railroad crossing and was unsuccessful in his attempts to back the cars, he started forward at a speed estimated by the witnesses as from eight to twenty miles an hour, crossing two streets in the City of Macon without checking the speed of his train. The court charged the Civil Code, §§ 2222, 2224, requiring an engineer to check the speed of his locomotive within four hundred yards of such crossings, so as to be able to stop in time should any. person or thing be crossing the track; and in this connection the court instructed the jury that if they believed that the failure of the plaintiff to observe this statutory requirement was a proximate cause of his injury, he would not be entitled to recover. There are several cases construing these sections of the code. Their application has been confined to injuries to person or property, occasioned by a railroad company at a grade crossing; and in these cases it has been held to be negligence per se not to comply with the statute. There has been no adjudication as to what effect a failure to observe this statute would have upon the engineer in the event he was injured at a point either on or near the crossing. The statute makes it the duty of the engineer, and not of the railroad company, to blow the whistle and check the speed of the train. If he fails to do this as required by the statute, he is subject to indictment for a misdemeanor; and if, in the commission of this criminal act, an injury results which could have been
In Wallace v. Cannon, 38 Ga. 199, a widow of a deceased employee sued the Western & Atlantic Railroad Company to recover damages because of the death of her husband by the alleged carelessness of the employees of the railroad company while her husband was acting as engineer. The defendant pleaded that at the time of the killing the railroad company was engaged in the transportation of insurrectionary troops to fight against the
Judgment on main bill of exceptions affirmed', cross-bill of exceptions dismissed.