9 S.E.2d 782 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1940
1. A driver of an automobile who knows that he is approaching a railroad crossing in the nighttime, and fails to reduce the speed of his car so that it may be stopped within the range of his lights when he discovers that a train of cars is stopped or passing over such crossing, is guilty of such a lack of ordinary care as will prevent a recovery from the railroad.
2. The duty of blowing the whistle and ringing the bell, relatively to the drivers of automobiles, is a duty which is owing to persons on the crossing or approaching the crossing. After the front end of the train has passed, and the impact between the cars and the automobile is not immediate, the failure to perform this statutory duty is not the proximate cause of the collision.
The petition alleged that the plaintiff was driving his automobile at two o'clock a. m., on a paved street in Millen, Georgia, and ran it into a space between two box-cars attached to the train of the defendant, which was barely moving across the crossing. The engine pulling said train had crossed the crossing, and was six car-lengths distant from the crossing, and could not have been seen by the plaintiff, on account of stacks of lumber adjacent to the tracks. There was a street light seventy feet distant from the crossing and about fifteen feet above the pavement, which light is alleged to have caused the lights of the plaintiff's moving car to blur, and prevented him from seeing the train on the crossing in time to stop. He was traveling thirty-five miles per hour, and was within forty feet of the train before he discovered it, and it was then too late for him to stop his car before it ran into the cars six lengths behind the engine. The headlights of his car were in good condition *574 and burning brightly. It was further alleged that plaintiff had been at a filling-station, seated in his car, two hundred yards distant from the crossing, "and had the bell been tolled or the air whistle blown before the said crossing was reached by the engine of said train, your petitioner could not have failed to have heard either or both of said signals before the started his automobile from Burke's filling-station toward said crossing, . . or while proceeding from Burke's filling-station toward said crossing." The defendant was alleged to have been negligent in the failure to toll the bell or blow the whistle, and in failing to keep a watchman at said crossing. The petition alleged that the plaintiff was a resident of that community.
The engine was six car-lengths beyond the crossing at the time of the accident, and was "barely moving." Construing the petition most strongly against the plaintiff, we may say that the road was straight, that the plaintiff knew of the crossing and that it might be occupied by a train, and that the light might prevent the lights on his automobile from showing a train if it were on the crossing and he did not slacken his speed enough to stop his car, if such were the case, before it ran into the train barely moving. We think it clearly appears that by the use of ordinary care the plaintiff could have prevented the results of the defendant's negligence, if any. Brinson v. Davis,
The court erred in overruling the general demurrer as to both counts of the petition, the second count alleging wanton negligence under the same facts.
Judgment reversed. Broyles, C. J., and MacIntyre, J.,concur.