18 Ga. App. 592 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1916
In this case the plaintiff sought compensation by way of damages for his own negligent conduct in operating a dangerous and deadly instrumentality, to wit, a two-passenger automobile. In it he had crowded four people, including a young lady.' The trouble occurred after ten o’clock at night, on a chert street in Atlanta that had the appearance of having holes in it, which holes did not always exist. Punning, according to the evidence, at the rate of twelve to fifteen miles an hour, he did strike a real hole and his ear was damaged. Fortunately nothing was injured but the car, which, though injured, continued its career one- hundred feet beyond the place where it “got in the hole.” The plaintiff sued in the municipal court of Atlanta. The jury found against his contentions, though the defendants offered no evidence. He carried his case by certiorari to the superior court, and the certiorari' was overruled. In due course the case was brought to this court, and the láw requires that each exception shall be passed upon (which law the writer of this opinion desires to say en passant is the cause of thu congested condition of the dockets of the Supreme Court and of this court).
Judgment affirmed.