16 Ga. App. 196 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1915
G. E. Fosterling sued the Savannah Electric Company for alleged injuries received by him while a passenger on one of the cars of the defendant. The jury found for the plaintiff. Motion for a new trial was made and overruled by the court, and the defendant excepted.
1. Where a contention of a party to a suit, set forth in his pleadings, is not supported by the evidence, it is error for the court to charge specifically upon that subject. Wylly v. Gazan, 69 Ga. 507 (3, 4); Livingston v. Hudson, 85 Ga. 835 (8), 836 (12 S. E. 7); Robinson v. Stevens, 93 Ga. 535 (21 S. E. 96); Heard v. Coggins, 134 Ga. 52 (67 S. E. 429); Southern Railway Co. v. Parham, 10 Ga. App. 531 (4), 538 (73 S. E. 763). In this case the contention of the defendant in its answer, that the plaintiff’s injury was due to his own negligence and want of care, in attempting to alight in a negligent manner from a moving car, was not supported by any evidence. Upon this point counsel for defendant in error, in their brief, make the assertion that “during the trial of this case, no contention was made that the plaintiff was seeking to alight from a moving ear; it did not occur to counsel for either party, or to the court, that the testimony could be construed into any such contention.” This assertion was not denied in the reply brief of counsel for plaintiff in error. We have carefully searched the record but can discover no evidence which would have authorized the jury to find that the plaintiff, at the time he was injured, was attempting to alight from a moving car. And hence the court did not err in failing to present this issue specifically to the jury, or in failing to charge thereupon. None of the decisions cited by counsel for the plaintiff in error are in conflict with this ruling. In Georgia Railway & Electric Co. v. Baker, 1 Ga. App. 832 (58 S. E. 88), which is especially stressed in their reply brief, the holding on this point is as follows: “It is error for the court to omit to charge
2. Counsel for plaintiff in error, in the 3d and 4th grounds of the motion for a new trial, complain that the court did not submit to the jury the issue that the. plaintiff could not recover “if his injuries were due to the fact that he went upon the platform when there, was no necessity therefor, and under, such circumstances that it, was negligence for him to go thereupon;” and that “the court did not instruct the jury that if the plaintiff, without cause or good reason therefor, went upon the platform at a .time and under such circumstances as that the going would constitute negligence, and the plaintiff’s injuries were caused thereby,, the jury would be authorized to find for the defendant.” In our .opinion the evidence in this case was not such as to require a specific submission of this issue, or that such instructions be given to. the:jury. The evidence was that Fosterling was a passenger. upon a car of-the defendant company; that he was in arclosed street-car, about 9 or 10 o’clock at night; that as the car was approaching a sharp curve (described by some of the witnesses as a “right-angle curve”), he arose from his seat in the ear and stepped through the dpor upon the front platform ;• that he tapped the motorman upon the back and told him that he wished to get off at Charlton street, which was some two or three blocks distant; that the car was then moving at a speed of from five to twelve miles an hour (as testified to.by different witnesses) ; that the motorman turned and saw Fosterling, and, according to his (the motorman’s) own testimony, saw his condition and knew that if the car “hit-the curve,” the slightest sway of the car. would throw Fosterling off, unless he held on to something; and yet he released the brakes, put on two more points of current, and “hit the curve” with such speed that the car jerked and lurched, threw Fosterling from the top of the platform and caused his injury. There was some evidence on the part of the defendant that Fosterling was partially intoxicated, but on this point there was sufficient rebutting evidence to authorize the jury to find that he wás not under the influence of intoxicants on the night in question, he having drunk only three glasses-of beer. According to common repute, it would be a most extraordinary occurrence if any
In Myrick v. Macon Railway & Light Co., 6 Ga. App. 38 (64 S. E. 296), where a passenger went upon the platform of a street-ear and stood upon the step before his destination was reached, and fell and was injured, the court said that he “was not attempting to alight, for he had not quite reached his destination. His presence upon the step was, at most, but preparation to alight when the point should be reached at which the car ought to have been stopped, and, according to his statement, his being thrown from
'We have already pointed out, in another place, that the case of Georgia Railway & Electric Co. v. Baker, supra, is not in line with this case. The defendant, in its answer, did not specifically set up the defense that th¿ plaintiff was guilty of negligence in going upon the platform of the car. However, the plaintiff having alleged that he was wholly free from fault, and this allegation having been denied by the defendant, the pleadings were sufficient to raise the issue as to whether the plaintiff could, by the exercise of ordinary care, have avoided the consequences of the defendant’s negligence; and this principle was clearly and repeatedly charged by the court in this case.
We think that the charge of the court was more favorable to the defendant than the evidence warranted; for the jury evidently accepted the version of the transaction given by the plaintiff and the defendant’s motorman; and if that be the truth, the immediate and proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injury was the negligence of the motorman in increasing the speed of the car after he had seen the perilous position of the plaintiff on the platform, and just as he was about to enter upon a sharp and dangerous curve, thereby throwing the plaintiff from the - platform and causing his injury, under such circumstances that the consequences of this negligence could not have been avoided after it became existent. Under this theory, the rule of law requiring the plaintiff to exercise ordinary care to avoid the consequences of the defendant’s negligence was not applicable. See Savannah Electric Co. v. Lackens, supra; Georgia, Florida & Alabama R. Co. v. Sasser, 4 Ga. App. 276, 283, 284 (61 S. E. 505).
3. The instructions complained of in the 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, and 9th grounds of the amendment to the motion for a new trial are not objectionable, when considered in connection with the pleadings, the evidence, and the entire charge of the court. There was no error in any of them requiring the grant of a new trial. The
4. The evidence in this ease strongly authorized, if it did not demand, the yerdict. When, to use a homely expression, we put all the evidence “in the pot” and “boil it down,” what remains is the unmistakable fact that the plaintiff’s injury was caused by the gross negligence of the defendant’s motorman after the plaintiff had gotten upon the platform of the1 car, and that this negligence occurred after the motorman saw and realized the plaintiff’s' peril. Under any theory of the evidence, the jury were compelled to find that the plaintiff’s injury resulted directly from this negligence of the motorman in increasing the speed of the car as it entered upon a sharp and dangerous curve, thereby causing the car to suddenly jerk and lurch; which threw the plaintiff from the platform and caused his injury.
The court did not err in overruling the motion for a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.