124 Ga. 1056 | Ga. | 1906
This was a complaint against a street-car company for personal injuries.1 The plaintiff alleged in substance as follows: He was riding on the back platform of one of defendant’s cars, engaged in smoking, it being a rule of the defendant company that all smokers should occupy that portion of the car; and while standing there he projected his head two or three inches beyond the side line of the ear for the purpose of expectorating, when it came in violent contact with a pole which the company had placed very near the track, and he was severely injured. The defendant filed a general demurrer to the petition, but before it was passed on by the court the plaintiff offered an amendment, in which it was alleged, that the conductor knew of his presence on the platform but did not warn him of the line of poles that the defendant company had erected very close to the track — much closer than it is customary for railroads of this character to,erect them; and that there was no guard or gate to keep defendant from protruding his head beyond the line of the car. He also alleged that it was a rule of the company that no one should spit on the floor of the car or platform. The demurrer was sustained, the amendment .disallowed, and the petition dismissed. The plaintiff excepted.
It was manifest error for the court to hold that the plaintiff in this case was, as a matter of law, so lacking in care and caution that he was precluded from recovering damages for the injury sustained. What the jury may find when the case is submitted to them under proper instructions we do not know. If the plaintiff supports the allegations of his petition and the amendment thereto by evidence, the question as to whether he is entitled to recover against the company is eminently one of fact, to be determined from all the facts and circumstances of the case. It appears that the plaintiff was rightfully on the platform of the car; he was there by permission and at the invitation of the defendant company. He was smoking at the time of receiving the injury complained of, or rather he was engaged in doing that which is a usual and natural concomitant of indulgence in the pleasure of smoking, — he was spitting. And for the purpose of complying with a rule of the company which forbade spitting on the floor of the car he momentarily pro-•jeeted his head beyond the line of the side of the car some two or three inches, and in that instant his head was violently brought in contact with one of a line of poles constructed and maintained by
Judgment reversed.