138 Ga. 31 | Ga. | 1912
(After stating the foregoing facts.)
The present ease does not involve a refusal to accept or carry the passenger, but a contention that the company received the plaintiff as a passenger and carried him, but did not provide for him room within the car. While the general rule of duty is as above stated, there may be circumstances which would excuse the carrier for a failure fully to comply therewith. Whether one who bought a ticket and applied for passage would be entitled to recover in a suit for breach of contract, if he were delayed by reason of a failure to furnish proper accommodation, is not now under consideration. He can not insist on riding free because the accommodations are not such as they should be. Generally the question of whether a railroad company is negligent, under the circumstances of the particular case, in not furnishing sufficient accommodations, is one for the jury. In this case the court submitted that question to the jury. Several of the grounds of the motion for a new trial complained of charges on the subject and refusals to'charge as requested. While there may have been some ground for verbal criticism as to one or two of the charges, in the main the court submitted the question of diligence or negligence on the part of the defendant in the manner above indicated. Some of the requests to charge on this subject were themselves not perfectly correct statements of the law in connection with the evidence, and others were substantially covered by the charge given. The evidence on which the request contained in’ the nineteenth ground of the motion was based seems to have been only that the conductor on that train did not know that there was a crowd at Jackson; nor was there anything to show whether additional accommodations could have been provided. His evidence tended to show that all passengers were in fact in the car. If the request were accurately stated as a principle of law, it was not adjusted to the evidence. So, too, there was no error in refusing the request contained in the 22d ground of the motion. It ignored the general rule of duty on the part of the carrier to furnish accommodations, and sought to have it declared that a failure to provide a seat for a passenger was not of itself proof of negligence, and to
Apparently speaking of cases not controlled by statute, it is said in 2 Hutchinson on Carriers, § 1113: “But it is not negligent per se for a carrier to fail to furnish a passenger with a seat. Such a failure is only evidence of negligence to be weighed by the jury. There are circumstances under which a passenger might prefer to enter a ear and stand up, rather than not make the journey. In such ease it can not be said as a matter of law that the carrier is negligent in permitting him to exercise such privilege.” See, in this connection, Lyndon v. Georgia Ry. &c. Co., 3 Ga. App. 535 (60 S. E. 278).
In another excerpt from the charge, to which exception was taken, the court again used the expression, “in accordance with their enlightened conscience, as fair and impartial jurors.” In connection' with its context, the presiding judge, in this instance, may have intended rather a warning to the jury to act fairly and impartially, than to make the enlightened conscience of impartial jurors the measure of special damages.
Judgment reversed.