93 Ga. 662 | Ga. | 1894
The doctrine is thus broadly stated in Lawson on Expert and Opinion Evidence, pages 176,177: “An-expert may testify to an opinion of his own derived from books”; and the authorities there cited seem to sustain the text. We find the following pertinent note at the bottom of the latter page : ■“ Said Dr. Crell, on the trial •of Spencer Cowpei-, in answer to an objection by the court: ‘ My Lord, it must be by reading, as well as a man’s own experience, that will make any one a physician, for without the reading of books in the-art, the art itself cannot be attained to. I humbly conceive that
In View of the undisputed facts disclosed by the record in this case, the plaintiff was not entitled to recover. The only fair conclusion from the evidence as a whole is, that the municipal authorities exercised the proper diligence in having the gate made secure, and it does not appear that there was any negligence on the part of the “ city fathers,” after the gate again became insecure, in failing to ascertain that fact. We think a new trial should be had, and we grant it the more readily because it also appears that the plaintiff had, only a short time before the injury, been plainly and distinctly warned by Watkins not to lean upon this gate, but, either forgetting or disregarding the warning, persisted in so doing.
Judgment reversed.