4 Ga. App. 313 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1908
Mrs. D. N. Lewis brought suit in the city court, of Macon against the Macon Kailway and Light Company, to recover damages resulting from personal injuries. The jury found a verdict in her favor for $5,000, and the railway company filed a motion for a new trial, which was overruled. The motion, besides the general grounds, contains three special assignments of error: (1) that the verdict is excessive; (2) that the-verdict is not justified by the evidence, but was rendered on account of bias and prejudice against the defendant, and (3) that the verdict was founded upon evidence which did not sustain or tend to sustain the cause of action set up in the declaration of plaintiff, to wit, that she was injured by a jerk caused by the forward movement of the car of the defendant.
The original petition alleges negligence by the defendant as follows : that on August 26, 1906, plaintiff was a passenger on one ■of the ears of the company, in the city of Macon; that at the corner of Bellevue street and Carling avenue, the point of her destination, the car was brought to a stop for the purpose of allowing her to leave it; that while attempting to alight, she was thrown from the car; that the distance from the step of the car to the ground, where the car stopped and where she attempted to alight, was about three feet; that although in plain view of the conductor when she made the effort to alight, and he saw it was difficult to get off at the place selected by him for her to get off, he made no effort whatever to
The negligence alleged against the defendant was proved alone by the testimony of the plaintiff. She testified, that the car stopped for her to get off, where the ground was very low and very rough, and the running-board at the side of the car, upon which she had to step to get off, was very high from the ground; that when she went to leave the car she stepped on the running-board and was in the act of stepping down, and there was a movement of the car backward, not forward, and she was thrown four or five feet from the car; that it was the car’s motion that threw her, — nothing else; that she felt the motion of the car, and at the time she felt it she was in the act of stepping off; that she felt the motion of the running-board; that she was violently thrown to the ground by the -motion of the car, and was taken up and carried into a near-by house by some of the passengers, and put on a bed, where she remained until she was taken home in a hack. The character and extent of the injuries which she thus received are fully and specifically described by her, and her testimony in this respect is corroborated by that of four or five physicians who examined and treated her. It may be stated generally that the evidence on this point substantially supports the allegations of the petition. The conductor and several of the passengers contradicted the testimony of the plaintiff as to the manner in which she was injured. These witnesses testified, that the car was standing still when she stepped off; that they did not detect any movement at all of the car; that there were other passengers getting off the other side of the car at the same time; that there was no- jerk of the car, backward or otherwise, that threw her to the ground; that the only cause they could assign for her fall was that the step was higher from the ground than she had calculated, and that when she turned loose she consequently fell to the ground. All the witnesses testified that s)ie was thrown some distance from the car, from four to ten feet. A contradictory statement of the plaintiff, as to the manner in which she was injured, was also proved by the defendant, this statement being that she did not know whether she was thrown off the car or whether she fell therefrom.