87 Ga. 272 | Ga. | 1891
The facts of this case will be found in the official report. Under these facts the court did right in granting a nonsuit in the case. It was gross negligence on the part of two females to attempt to walk upon a trestle one hundred and fifty yards long and from twelve to fifteen feet high, near the time when a train was due, it further appearing that the servants of the railroad company did all that was possible to-be done after they discovered the females on the trestle. Judgment affirmed.
The minor children of Mrs. Phillips, by their guardian, sued the railway company for the homicide of their mother by the running of its train. After the introduction of the evidence for the plaintiffs the court granted a nonsuit, which is assigned as error. The principal witness for the plaintiffs was Mrs. Craig, wliose testimony was, in brief, as follows: Mrs. Phillips was run over and killed by the train of defendant at the north end of a trestle on its road, at about ten o’clock in the morning. She and I had been at the water-tank at the south end of the trestle, and had started back home across the trestle. When we first heard the train we were not frightened, as we thought it would stop for wafer, such being the custom of this train. When we saw it pass the tank we were not walking very fast, but commenced running. As we were nearing the north end of the trestle Mrs. Phillips fell and I tried to assist her to rise, but before I could do so, was myself thrown from the track by the locomotive, and Mrs. Phillips was run over and killed, about one hundred yards north of the tank. The railroad is straight at the place where the killing occurred, and wre could have been seen about one half mile. The train was running very fast, and no whistle was blown
From the testimony of other witnesses the following, in substance, appeared: The people of the neighborhood, and the public generally, have been in the habit of using the road and trestle as a footway for a number of years, with the knowledge of and without objection by the defendant. The trestle is about three or four hundred feet long and about twelve or fifteen feet high. The ground under the east side of it is in grass, and on the west side there are rocks, timber, etc. The creek comes near the trestle at the north end and turns and runs nearly parallel with the track nearly all the way to the tank at the south end. There is a dam across the creek, and water is pumped into the tank, the water running over the dam and the pumping making, when the pump is in motion, a considerable noise. The road is straight south of the trestle for about half a mile, and a person on an engine could see a person on the trestle for that distance. It is a little up grade where Mrs. Phillips was killed. One witness testified that the pump runs constantly; that the water running over the dam made so much noise that when he went across the trestle he could not hear the roar of a train and never depended .on his hearing for trains, but kept a lookout; that he did not know whether he could have