17 Ga. App. 34 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1915
The suit against ¿11 the defendant railroad companies was properly brought in Morgan county. The injury having occurred in that county, and the Georgia Railroad & Banking Company having
2. A railroad company which is a common carrier, if either the initial or the ultimate carrier, transporting a ear containing freight, owes a duty to the consignee or his servant, when either the consignee or his servant is engaged in the business of unloading the car after it has arrived at its destination. This duty is to see that the car and its devices for unloading it are reasonably safe for such purpose. This is true although the journey of the car is ended and it has been switched upon a side-track belonging to the consignee. S. F. & W. Ry. Co. v. Booth, 98 Ga. 20 (25 S. E. 928); Sykes v. St. Louis Railroad, 178 Mo. 693 (77 S. W. 723).
(o) The duty of an initial carrier which receives freight to be ultimately delivered by other connecting carriers to a consignee whose servants are to unload the car is to exercise ordinary care to see that the car and its appliances for unloading it are in a reasonably safe condition, so that such servants, while themselves exercising ordinary care, can proceed with the work of unloading the car with reasonable safety. Sykes v. St. Louis Railroad, supra.
(6) It is the duty of the ultimate carrier to inspect such a car and ascertain whether it and its unloading devices are in .a reasonably safe condition, and if, on examination, the car or any part of its unloading appliances is found to be dangerously defective, it is its duty to make the necessary repairs, or to notify the consignee of such dangerous defects. In this case, though one of the dangerous defects of the car — the “bent link” — was covered over and concealed by the coal in the car, thus making it difficult for the ultimate carrier to discover it, the other dangerous defect — the worn and defective ratchet — was not so concealed, and it seems reasonable that its condition could have been discovered by the ultimate carrier, in the exercise of ordinary care. Sykes v. St. Louis Railroad, supra.
(c) The duty of an intermediate carrier is to inspect the ear received by it from another road, and to see that the car is in a reasonably safe condition to be received, transported, and delivered by it to the next connecting carrier; but it owes no duty to the consignee or his servant which would render it liable for an injury to either, caused by a defective car. Sykes v. St. Louis Railroad, supra; Ladd v. N. W. Rail
4. In this case there is no presumption of negligence against the defendant companies. In fact, if there is any presumption at all, it is that the defendant companies are free from negligence until the contrary is shown. Likewise, however, the deceased is presumed to have been innocent of contributory negligence until the contrary is established. Sykes v. St. Louis Railroad, and Roddy v. Railroad Co., supra. Unless the petition shows upon its face that the plaintiff is guilty of contributory negligence, the petition upon this point is good as against general demurrer.
5. The petition did not set forth a cause of .action against the Seaboard Air-Line Railway, an intermediate carrier, and the general demurrer filed by that defendant was properly sustained.
6. The petition set forth a cause of action against the Southern Railway Company, for the reasons stated above in paragraph 2 (c). A cause of action was also shown against the Virginia & Southwestern Railway Company and the Georgia Railroad & Banking Company, the initial and the ultimate carriers respectively, and the court erred in sustaining the general demurrers filed by these three defendants.
Judgment affirmed in part, and reversed in part.