112 Ga. 181 | Ga. | 1900
TMs case was before this court at the March term, 1899, and is reported in'108 Ga. 704. The only question which.
On this subject Mr. Justice Hall in the Brinson case, 70 Ga. 240, very strongly said: “ To consent is one thing, and is quite different from mere forbearance, on the part of the defendant, to seek redress whenever its rights are temporarily invaded by a wrong-doer. By endurance or toleration of a trespass, we do not understand that any of a party’s privileges and rights are necessarily waived or yielded, or that it ceased to be entitled to the protection afforded by the law. By direct consent to the úse of its way it certainly waives any right to proceed against one thus found thereon, for any wrong that may be imputed on account of such use. There can be no right set up by the public from mere user, however frequent or long-continued it may be. It is so inconsistent with the rights and obligations of the company that it can not, without more, be presumed to have consented to it; least of all can it be claimed, with any show of reason, that the right of the public has, by such facts, become adverse to the right of the owner of the road.” In the case then under consideration, it was shown that it was the common custom of persons passing through the town on foot to walk along the railroad-track where the injury occurred, and that school-children, one of whom was the injured person, had been in the habit, for years, of passing along a path thereon with the knowledge of the railroad authorities. Certainly, the facts of that case as to user of the railroad right of way by pedestrians are stronger than those in the one now under consideration. Mr. Justice Hall treated the person injured, not as a licensee, but as a trespasser pure and simple, notwith
But the abstract question whether the injured person was in this case a licensee or a trespasser can not, in our judgment, control the case, although, if the rule stated hy Mr. Elliott in vol. 3 of his treatise on Railroads, § 1250, be correct, the law regulating the duty which a railroad company owes to each of these classes of persons does not greatly differ. He says: “ The better rule is that the licensee takes his license subject to its concomitant perils, and the licensor, as a general rule, owes him no duty except to refrain
It may, therefore, be assumed with certainty that had the defendant in error, appreciating the dangerous position which he voluntarily occupied when he stepped from the track upon which he was walking to the intervening space between it and the next track» stood still, he would not have been injured. To have thrown out his hand and struck the passing car seems to have been without reason, unless the theory of the plaintiff in error be right, that he attempted to board it. He says that he did it through excitement. It could have been neither a natural nor a justifiable excitement which would cause a man, standing between a locomotive and a car, to reach out his hand and voluntarily put it against the car when going at a rate of speed of thirty miles an hour. The defendant in error says that he did this to protect himself. But he does not undertake to explain by what possibility such an act could have afforded any protection. But this is not all. In giving an account of his injury he said: “ I was between the tracks, and walked over towards the other track to my left. I didn’t get on that track. I got close enough to it to be struck by the train as it passed along. I didn’t look back to see if anything was coming. There was nothing to keep me from looking back; it was broad day
In the case of the Central R. Co. v. Smith, 78 Ga. 698, Chief Justice Bleckley, in his opinion which treated of the liability of a railroad company for injuries received by a person on the track, applied certain conclusions of law to the facts of the case, which seem applicable here. He says: “ The train was probably running at a much higher speed than it ought to have run so near a crossing. There was some evidence tending to show that the speed was low; but grant that it was high, too high, and that there was very great negligence on the part of the railroad company, yet it is manifest that Smith was out of his place at the time he was injured. Grant that the track was often used by persons to walk along it; that there was no objection to such use; that Smith was there by implied or tacit license; he was there under circumstances that required him to have all his senses on the alert for trains, and to get out of the way when any of them approached. It would be flagrantly unreasonable and improbable to presume that he or any one else had the shadow of a right to use the track, especially at such an hour, on any other condition. . . He quietly walked along upon the track as if it belonged to him; the train struck him, knocked Mm down and broke Ms leg, those on the engine not see-Mg Mm or bemg aware of Ms presence. It was at least as much Ms busmess to look for the engme as it was the engmeer’s busmess to look for Mm.” Not only was the defendant m error grossly negligent, under the circumstances detailed by himself, m not looking for other trains, but, under Ms own evidence, had he not reached out and placed Ms hand against a movmg car he probably would not have been mjured. So that he not only contributed to Ms injury, but it seems to us was practically the cause of it, notwithstandmg the railroad was negligent in the rate of speed at wMch it was runnrng the train of cars. At least, it is clear that by the exercise of ordinary care wMch reqmred Mm, situated as he was, to look up and down the track, to place himself in as secure a position as possible, and not voluntarily to brmg any part of his person in contact with the rapidly movmg car, he would probably not have been injured m any manner, certainly not m that wMch resulted from Ms act. Our conclusion, therefore, is that the verdict which
Judgment reversed.