119 Ga. 371 | Ga. | 1904
This case originated under an attachment sued out by W. E. Cody against the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, for the value of a mule alleged to have been killed through the negligence of the defendant, the mule being averred to be of the value of $135. The declaration in attachment alleged that the defendant company “received from petitioner,” at Murray, Ky., nineteen horses and four mules, to be transported by it as a
After giving due consideration to the first of these assignments of error, we have reached the conclusion that the defendant’s demurrer should have been sustained. Accordingly, we shall not undertake to deal with either of the other assignments of error; for, as the overruling of the defendant’s demurrer was erroneous, all subsequent proceedings in the trial court are properly to be regarded as of no effect. Southern Ry. Co. v. Dyson, 109 Ga. 104; Morgan v. Gibian, 115 Ga. 146, and cit. On the argument
In the case of Miller v. Merchants & Miners Transportation Co., 115 Ga. 1009, it appears that Miller sued the transportation company to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by him on account of its negligence. The petition alleged that he was an employee of the defendant; that one of its vessels, while lying at or near a wharf, had two piles of lumber loaded on her deck, one on the port and the other on the starboard side, and on these piles .of lumber were loaded a number of cross-ties ; that as he was going along between the two piles of lumber, engaged in loading the vessel, it suddenly listed to the starboard, causing one of the cross-ties which had been loaded on the port