145 Ga. 517 | Ga. | 1916
L. J. Purvis brought suit against the Atlanta Northern Kailway Company, seeking to recover damages for a personal injury. He alleged, that he entered a car of the defendant, paid his fare, and notified the conductor of the street crossing at which he wished to alight; that the car failed to stop at that point, and he was negligently carried beyond it; that the conductor demanded another fare from him, and, upon his failure to pay it, forced him to alight in the dark at a dangerous place, by reason of which he fell from an embankment and was injured. By amendment two additional counts were added. In these the plaintiff did not allege that he was a passenger or had paid his fare, but that he was on the car of the defendant, and was put off at a dangerous place. The jury found for the defendant. The plaintiff moved for a new trial, which was refused, and he excepted.
In connection with the evidence above mentioned, where the conduct of the second conductor in the alleged ejection of the
If evidence is admissible for any purpose, its admission will not cause a new trial. If the purpose for which the jury can consider such evidence is limited, this furnishes matter for instruction to the jury. An omission of the court to instruct the jury as to the purpose for which they could consider such testimony will not require a new trial, in the absence of an appropriate request for that purpose. Moorefield v. Fidelity Mutual Life Ins. Co., 135 Ga. 186 (3), 187 (69 S. E. 119); Baldwin v. State, 138 Ga. 349 (3), 350 (75 S. E. 324).
In the present case the argument of counsel for the defendant, of which complaint was made, may not have been very logical, and the manner in which it was expressed may have been unduly harsh; but under the facts of the case, we are not prepared to hold that the ruling of the court constituted reversible error. In the motion for a new trial it is recited that, in his opening argument to the jury, counsel for the defendant stated: “That plaintiff’s counsel, at the beginning of the trial had filed an amendment the effect of which was to make the original petition a lie. Plaintiff’s counsel protested to this statement, saying that the argument was unwar
Judgment affirmed.