55 Ga. App. 302 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1937
Mrs. Dora Duncan brought suit against the Southern Railway Company, a foreign corporation, and R. E. Brown, a resident of Georgia, for the alleged negligent homicide of her husband, J. A. Duncan, alleging that Brown was in the employment of the railway company as engineer, in charge of a switch-engine engaged in switching cars in what is known as the Decatur Street yards in Atlanta; that before his death her husband was a car-inspector whose duties required him to inspect cars in said yards; that in doing so it was necessary for him to go upon the railroad-tracks and between cars located thereon; that he was at work on track number 3 when the defendant company’s engineer, Brown, kicked a cut of cars into said track at a rapid and reckless rate of speed; that neither the engineer nor any of his crew gave
The railway company filed a timely petition and bond, seeking to remove the case to the district court of the United States for the northern district of Georgia, setting out, in addition to jurisdictional facts, that since the only acts of negligence charged against the railway company were those which it was said to have committed through its servant, the engineer Brown, different rules of substantive law governed with respect to its liability and that of its servant, as made under the pleadings, its liability being based on the doctrine of respondeat superior; and that consequently a separable controversy existed between it and the plaintiff. The court denied the petition for removal,- and the exception is to that judgment.
From the allegations of the petition it is plain that the plaintiff is not basing her right of recovery on the sole negligence of the
The contention of the plaintiff in error that a distinction should
We are aware that there are several decisions of the Federal district courts which hold contrary to the opinion we have reached, and we have carefully considered all of the cases cited by the plaintiff in error; but we are of the opinion that it has been settled by the Supreme Court of the United States, and the decisions of the appellate courts of this State above cited, that such a suit as is presented by the petition of the plaintiff in this case against the .two defendants does not involve a separable controversy as to either of them, although at common law the cause of action would have been- severable and not joint. Under the allegations of the petition, the liability of the non-resident defendant in the present case is absolute and primary, whether it be said that it arises only from the doctrine of respondeat superior, as contended by the plaintiff
Judgment affirmed.