123 Ga. 279 | Ga. | 1905
Mrs. Streyer sued the Macon Railway and Light. Company for damages on account of personal injuries, and obtained a verdict for $1,000. The company moved for a new trial, which was denied, and it excepted.
Negligence is, except in certain well-defined cases, a question for the jury. Had the court below held as matter of law that the failure of the plaintiff or her husband to look behind them as they attempted to cross the tracks was negligence, it would have been error requiring the grant of a new trial. The facts were in evidence — it was for the jury to say whether or not they con
2. The motion for a new trial complains of the following charge of the court: “Now the burden of proof is upon tbe plaintiff to show that she was injured, under the rules I have given you in charge, before any presumption arises; and if the evidence shows that her own negligence caused the injury alleged, she could not recover, though you may believe from the evidence that she was injured and that tbe company was likewise negligent, provided that you believe that the plaintiff’s negligence, from a consideration of the evidence in the case, you believe that the plaintiff’s negligence was greater than the negligence of the defendant company, its agents, servants, and employees.” It will be seen thát this charge states, in immediate connection with each other, two distinct propositions of law, viz., (1) that the plaintiff can not recover if her injuries were caused by her own'negligence, and (2) the doctrine of comparative negligence. Following the decisions of this court in Americus R. Co. v. Luckie, 87 Ga. 6, and Columbus R. Co. v. Peddy, 120 Ga. 590 (4), the charge which we have quoted must be held error requiring the grant of a new trial. While we are compelled to so rule, we feel constrained to say that the charge of the court as a whole placed upon the plaintiff a burden greater than she should have been required to bear. We feel sure that all errors in the charge will be corrected by the trial judge upon the resubmission of this case to a jury.
3. The evidence as to the permanence of the plaintiff’s injuries was by no means strong or convincing, but we can not say that it was erroneous for the trial judge to give to the jury instructions on the subject of damages for permanent injuries. It was in evidence that the plaintiff’s injuries were received nearly a 'year before the case was tried, that she had suffered continuously since that time, and that her suffering had not ceased or abated. We know of no law which confines the jury to medical expert testimony in considering a case of this kind, nor can we conceive of any reason why they may not draw their own inferences as to the permanence- of an injury from the length of time and the seriousness with which it has -continued. The Carlisle tables were .admitted in evidence without objection by counsel
4. The verdict was for one thousand dollars. In the light of the plaintiff’s evidence as to the extent of her injuries, this amount can not be considered excessive. Of the grounds of the motion for a new trial which were not abandoned, those which have not been considered in the foregoing complain of extracts from the judge’s charge, but they do not disclose error of such importance as to require the grant of a new trial. The judgment is reversed, for the reasons stated in .the second division of this opinion.
Judgment reversed.