101 Ga. 400 | Ga. | 1897
The pleadings and facts, so far as material to the questions made in the present case, are as follows.
M. M. Perry, as next friend of Emmett Perry, filed his petition in the superior court of Bibb county, alleging, in substance, that the Macon Consolidated Street Railroad Company, owning and operating a line of street and suburban street railroad in the city of Macon and county of Bibb, had injured and damaged petitioner in the sum of $15,000, for that, on or about the first day of April, 1893, said Emmett Perry, who is the minor
Subsequently the plaintiff amended his original petition, .and by way of amendment alleged, in substance, as follows: ■that defendant was further negligent, in that it ran said car along its track with said pile of lumber lying longitudinally •along its track for a distance of 30 feet and within 30 inches •of said track, and thereby said obstruction so hid said car .from the view of pedestrians, and so hid pedestrians from the view of those in charge of said car and from the motorman and •conductor of said car, that the persons in charge of said car, .in running the same along the track when the accident occurred, could not run the same safely and with all ordinary ■care and diligence towards the public and towards petitioner .and his infant child without ringing the bell of said car, and running the same at a slow rate of speed, and much slower •than 8 or 9 miles an hour; that at the time and place of said .accident defendant was negligent in running said car at the .rate of speed at which it was run along the line of said pile of .lumber, and in not ringing the bell while running at the place of said accident and in approaching said place, and in not running slowly at said time and place so as to take all necessary and reasonable precaution against injury to your petitioner .and his child and the public at said place, and in not exercising all ordinary and reasonable care and diligence in preventing said accident, and in permitting said obstructions to re? main within 30 inches of its track a distance of 40 feet, for three weeks, whereby the track and the approach of the same were so obstructed that said defendant could not see pedestrians approaching said track, and they in turn could not see the car; that petitioner’s child did not see the car, on account •of the obstruction, in time to avoid the accident; and that defendant could, in the exercise of ordinary care and diligence, have seen petitioner’s child in time to have stopped the car .and alarmed him from the track by ringing the bell.
The judgment of the court below granting a nonsuit in this case is sustained, not upon the theory that the person injured
In the management and operation of its line of railroad and cars in the streets of the city of Macon, the law imposed upon the defendant the duty of exercising ordinary care and diligence to avoid injury to pedestrians and travelers generally upon such streets, as well as to their property. Actionable negligence arises essentially from (1) a legal duty; (2) a breach of duty by failure to observe due care; and (3) such breach proximately causing damage. The question as to whether a legal duty existed to the party injured is one of law, and therefore for the court to pass upon. Whether there has been a breach of that duty, and whether it proximately caused damage to the plaintiff, are questions which depend upon circumstances, and therefore are usually to be determined by the jury. 16 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, p. 463. If, being charged with such a duty, the defendant has omitted to do something which a reasonable man, guided upon those con
In Shear. & Red. on Neg. § 56, the rule is stated to be, that “when the facts are clearly settled, and the course which common prudence dictated can be clearly discerned, the court should decide the question as a matter of law,” citing Beisiegel v. New York Central R. Co., 40 N. Y. 9; Stubley v. N. W. R. Co., L. R. 1 Exch. 13; Crafton v. Metropolitan R. Co., L. R. 1 C. P. 300.
In the present case the acts of negligence relied upon for a recovery were, (1) that the car was running at an unusual and illegal rate of speed; and (2) that in approaching the pile of lumber which had been permitted to remain in the street for a considerable length of time and which was very near the track of the defendant, no gong was sounded, nor other notice given of the approach of the car. The evidence, however, does not show that the car was being run at an unusual rate of speed;
It is undoubtedly the duty of the motorman, in propelling a car through the public streets, to notice the presence of other vehicles and pedestrians ahead of his car, and at all times be watchful to see that the way is clear; and where he has reason to apprehend danger, or should in the exercise of ordinary
In the present case the car, as we have said, was not being-propelled at an illegal or, indeed, unusual rate of speed; the track was straight and clear; it was in the daytime; no children were in the habit of playing about the pile of lumber; on this occasion they were so noiseless that persons sitting on a porch just opposite were not attracted by them; there was nothing to put the motorman on notice that they were present; and the conclusion is inevitable that the injury was the result of accident or misfortune.
Judgment affirmed.