W. T. Stephens sued the Macon, Dublin & Savannah Bailroad Company for damages caused by the alleged killing of two of his cattle by a moving train of the defendant. Both parties introduced evidence, and the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff. The defendant’s motion for new trial was overruled, and that judgment is assigned as error.
A special ground of the motion assigns error on the following charge of the court: “In all actions against railroad companies for damages done to persons or property, proof of injury inflicted by the running of locomotives or cars of such companies shall be prima facie evidence of the want of reasonable skill and care on the part of the servants of the companies in reference to such injury. However, this is a rebuttable presumption that may be overcome by proof showing that the injury was not due to want of reasonable skill and care on the part of the servants of the railroad company in reference to such injury, and when any evidence is offered showing the servants of the company were in the exercise of reasonable skill and care on their part in respect to such injury, same overcomes such prima facie evidence, and shifts the burden back to the plaintiff to show by the evidence in the case that the injury was due to the negligence of the employees of the defendant.” In
Seaboard Air-Line Ry.
v.
Fountain,
173
Ga.
593, 599 (
Applying the foregoing rulings to the facts of the instant case, the presumption of negligence on the part of the defendant, created by proof that the plaintiff’s cattle were killed by the running of defendant’s train, was entirely overcome and rebutted by the defendant when it introduced the testimony of the only eye-witnesses to the killing (the engineer and fireman of the train) which clearly and sufficiently explained every material fact connected with the killing. In S. A.-L. Co. v. Fountain, supra, 599, the Supreme Court approved and adopted the following holding of the Supreme Court of Mississippi in reference to the construing of the Mississippi statute: “An instruction upon the principle embraced in this statute ought not to be given where the testimony in the case sufficiently explains every material fact connected with the infliction of the injury.” After the testimony of the defendant’s engineer and fireman the inference created by proof of injury by the running of the defendant’s cars was at an end. Parrish v. Southwestern Railroad Co., supra. And the burden was on the plaintiff to show by evidence, without any aid from the statute in question, that the killing of his cattle was caused by the negligence of the defendant’s employees. The judge attempted to limit the effect of the first part of his charge by instructing the jury that the presumption against the defendant “may be overcome by proof showing that the injury was not due to want of reasonable skill and care on the part of the servants of the railroad company in reference to such injury, and when any evidence is offered showing the servants of the company were in the exercise of reasonable skill and care on their part in respect to such injury, same overcomes such prima facie evidence and shifts the burden back to the plaintiff to show by the- evidence in the case that the injury was due to the negligence of the employees of the defendant.” Hnder the above-cited decisions this part of the charge was erroneous. The defendant, to overcome the presumption, did not have to introduce evidence showing that its servants “were in the exercise of reasonable skill and care.” It only had the burden of explaining how the killing occurred and “producing some evidence to the contrary” of the plaintiff’s charges *640 of negligence. S. A.-L. Ry. Co. v. Fountain, supra. The presumption, being at an end, should not have been charged at all. Moreover, the charge as given was confusing and misleading to the jury and injected into the ease an issue which was not there. It was, under the facts of the case, the jury’s duty to determine the issue of negligence or no negligence, solely from the evidence, without any aid from or consideration of the dead presumption.
The court erred in overruling the special grounds of the motion for new trial. The general grounds are not passed upon.
Judgment reversed.
