112 Ga. 602 | Ga. | 1901
There was no error in granting a nonsuit in this case, as the allegata and the probata did not correspond. The petition made one case, and the evidence made another. The suit was against the Brunswick and Western Railroad Company. The petition alleged that, “on the 16th day of November, 1897, your petitioner was in the employ of said defendant as switchman in the city of Albany, said State and county, his principal duty being to couple and uncouple, cars in making and unmaking the trains- of defendant, and in carrying out said duties he obeyed the orders and instructions of one general yardmaster, who, together with your petitioner, was employed by several railroads at said point to make and unmake their trains, this defendant being one of said railroad companies so employing;” that “on said day it became his duty to-couple a certain car to certain other cars then attached to a switch-engine of defendant, engaged in drilling its cars on a side-track in said city and county;” and that while endeavoring to discharge this duty he was injured “by fault and negligence of defendant,” under the circumstances and as set forth in the petition, without any fault whatever upon his part. His proof showed that he was hired and paid by the Central of Georgia Railway Company, which company furnished him “ as a part of the crew to do the yard work; ” that the Central company furnished a part of this crew and the defendant company furnished a part of the same, and this yard crew or force was under the control and direction of a common yardmaster; that the plaintiff did nothing hut the defendant’s work, the yard crew being divided and he being assigned to duty in the part of the yard used by the defendant; that “at the time [he] was hurt, the train was on the siding used for the Brunswick and Western siding, the part of the yard used hy the defendant, on the east of the Central yard, on the part that was set apart for the defendant, ever since it had been built; ” that it was his duty to receive the trains of the defendant on that line as they came in, couple and uncouple them, and “it was Manning Wilkerson’s duty to receive the Central cars as they came;” that “the defendant’s road accepted [his] services all the time,” but he “ always got [his] pay through the Central, but any instructions that they gave [him] out of the Brunswick and Western office” he had to follow.
Judgment affirmed.