137 Ga. 60 | Ga. | 1911
1. A motion for a new trial was made during the August term, 1910, of Monroe superior court, and an order passed providing that it be heard on the 17th day of October, 1910, and “that the movant have until said time in which to prepare and present for approval a brief of the evidence in said case, and to perfect, by amendment or otherwise, his motion for a new trial, the said brief and amended motion to be filed as ordered by the court.” On October 17, 1910, the court passed the following order: “The hearing of the motion for a new trial in the above case having been set for to-day, and it appearing to the court that the court reporter has been unable to write out the evidence taken on the trial, the hearing is continued to the 29th of October, 1910.” On October 29, 1910, the following order was passed by the court: “This motion came up for hearing on the 17th day of October, 1910, and an order was passed continuing the motion until this the 29th day of October, 1910, for the reason that the stenographer had been unable to translate the notes of the evidence. On call of the
2. Jay sued the Southern Railway Company for damages because of injuries sustained by being struck by one of its trains while backing over an alleged public crossing in an unincorporated town or village. A verdict was rendered in favor of the defendant, and to the order of the court granting the plaintiff a new trial the defendant excepted. Held:
(а) If the crossing at which the plaintiff was injured was one to which the sections of the code requiring the blowing of the whistle and checking of speed are applicable, under the ruling of the case of Morgan v. Central Railroad, 77 Ga. 788, such sections did not require the engineer in charge of the train which injured the plaintiff to observe - their requirements; it appearing that the train was being backed on a sidetrack to leave cars thereon and began such backing between the blow-post and the crossing.
(б) The plaintiff testified that he was struck by a local freight-train backing into a side-track while he was attempting to cross a public road over the track, with his “eyes sorter down towards the mill when I was hit. I did not hear it. My hearing was and is defective, and I have to use an ear-trumpet. I did not hear any one call to me to get out of the way until just as I was hit. I heard some one halloo, and tried to get off the track, and just then the car hit me. . . The train was running seven or eight miles an hour. . . I did not look or listen for the train when I went on the track. I thought it was gone. I could have seen the train by just turning my eyes. If I had, I could have got off, and wouldn’t have got on. I wasn’t thinking. I was in a brown study. I didn’t look for the train, because I just forgot.” The evidence of other witnesses was that the train was running from three to five miles an hour. The undisputed evidence showed that the brakeman on the back end of the rear ear saw the plaintiff approaching the crossing, and
Judgment reversed.