2 Ga. App. 557 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1907
The defendant in error brought an action against the Southern Eailway Company, in the city court of Hall County, for the recovery of $10,000 damages, returnable to the February term, 1906, of that .court. This action, upon petition, was removed to the circuit court of the United States, upon the ground that the defendant was a non-resident and that the sum in controversy exceeded $2,000. The order of removal was granted by the judge of the city court of Hall county, February 2, 1906. The ease was duly transmitted to the circuit court of the United States for the northern district of Georgia; and on March 3, 1906, the case was stricken from the docket of that court, upon the ground that there had been no proper service upon the defendant. The dismissal was ordered by his honor Judge Newman, “without prej
(4) “The defendant Collier is in the employment of the defendant the Southern Railway Company, as its section-boss, and the injury hereinafter described occurred on account of the joint negligence of the defendants, the negligence being that of the defendant Collier in the capacity of section-boss, and the railway company, in negligently cutting the ditch as hereinafter described. (5) At said Green’s crossing the defendant had caused to be dug .a deep ditch right across the public road, and over a part of said crossing after it left the railroad tracks, and on the defendant railway company’s right of way, and upon the approach to said ■crossing. (7) The cutting of said ditch across said public road was done by and under the superintendence of the defendant Collier, acting on behalf of said Southern Railway Company; and the ■said ditch was about eight inches deep, and extended all the way across the road, and formed a dangerous obstruction to travel, and was negligence. (8) After cutting said ditch the said defendant Collier, acting as the agent of the defendant railway company, together with the section-forces under him, negligently left the .same open and negligently failed to cover the same in any way with plank or other covering, so that travelers upon the highway with vehicles could pass. Said ditch was in the middle of the road, and formed a dangerous obstruction to travel. (10) The •defendants were negligent in all the particulars aforesaid. Said ditch was cut upon the approach to the crossing, and was intended to run the water away from the track and road-bed of the defend.ant railway company. The cutting of said ditch was part of the railroad work for which said section-boss was' employed, and was part of the defendant railway company’s road work to keep its road-bed free from water and dampness and to prevent the water from ponding. But the said section-foreman was negligent in
The connection ■ of the plaintiff — his actings and doings at the-time of the alleged injury — is stated in paragraph nine of his petition, which is as follows: “On the 19th day of September, 1905, and about two o’clock in the afternoon, plaintiff was driving his-wagon along said public road; and when the same got upon said crossing and road and reached the ditch, the effect of said wagon-striking into said ditch, which was deep and abrupt, was to cause-the pole of the wagon to break, and as it broke the wagon was. partly wrecked, and plaintiff was thrown to the ground and caught in parts of the wagon, and the brake caught his leg, and he was thrown to the ground, his leg broken, and he was greatly and permanently injured.”
At the appearance term the defendants demurred to the petition, and also filed a plea in abatement. The demurrer is as follows: “(1) There is no cause of action set.out in plaintiff’s petition. (2) Plaintiff shows by the allegations in his petition that-if there was any negligence on the part of the defendants it was known to the plaintiff, and he could have avoided the same by the exercise, of ordinary care. (3) By his petition plaintiff shows-that the alleged ditch, which he says was negligently cut, was in Cull view, and the existence, condition, and depth known to him,, and that he took the risk when he drove over it, and can not recover. (4) From plaintiff’s petition it is apparent that plaintiff’s, injury was the result of an accident from causes unknown and from no negligence on the part of the defendants. (5) Plaintiff' does not allege any act against these defendants which was joint; he alleges no act against the defendant Collier, except an act of mere negligence, and no act against the defendant the Southern Railway Company, except its own responsibility for the negligence of its employee, and alleges no overt act of misfeasance against either; and for that reason the-joint action will not lie.”
This demurrer was overruled. The defendants’ plea in bar was, by consent, submitted to the presiding judge, who refused to sus’-' tain the same, holding that it was unnecessary that the costs due in
The plea in abatement was necessarily based on the idea that, because the costs were unpaid, the former suit was still pending; for the order of the United States judge in striking the former case from the docket expressly allowed the plaintiff (if the cause of action be the same) to recommence his action; and it was recommenced in six months. But in the case now before us the defendants were not the same as in the prior case. The Southern Railway Company was the sole defendant in the case dismissed in the United States court, and the Southern Bailway Company and A. C. Collier are joint defendants in the case now under investigation. The plea in bar from its very nature was founded upon the maxim, “nemo debet bis vexari, si constat curias quod sit pro una et eadem causa.” No'one ought to be annoyed twice if it appears to the court that there is only one and the same cause of action. When we consider that the reason for the rule (that the
In Kent v. So. Bell Tel. Co., 120 Ga. 980, where the greater portion of the danger was concealed by the peculiar manner in which the ditch was cut and was not apparent to the plaintiff, the Supreme Court held that the petition set forth a cause of action, because these allegations took it out of the rule declared in Sheats v. Rome, supra, and Cook v. Atlanta, 94 Ga. 613, but reaffirmed the doctrine of those cases by saying that the plaintiff could not recover if “she knew what was before her; with full knowledge she assumed the risk, and could no't put the injurious consequences, upon another, even though that other had been at fault in creating the condition out of which her damage arose. But the petition does not make such a case.” And in the first headnote the court held, that “Where, with full knowledge of the existence of a ditch, in a highway, and without any emergency requiring it to be
This court has also held (in the Miller case, cited below), that a corporation may be sued 'jointly with its employee. So the railway company and its section-boss may be jointly sued for damages resulting from the negligent and improper discharge of his duties by such boss. The boss, as a wrong-doer, is personalty responsible to the party injured by his misfeasance resulting from failure to use reasonable care and diligence in the performance of his duty, and the company is responsible for the misfeasance of its agent. The section-boss and a railway company can be sued when the sole ground of the liability of the railroad company is the act of the section-boss alone. See Ry. Co. v. Miller, 1 Ga. App. 616; Morrison v. Ry. Co., 74 Pac. 1064; Howe v. R. Co., 60 L. R. A. 949; Able v. Ry. Co., 73 S. C. 173; Chesapeake & O. R. Co. v. Dixon, 179 U. S. 131.
But, for the reasons already stated, we think the court erred in overruling the first, second, and third paragraphs of the demurrer, as it plainly appears from the allegations of the petition (which indeed should be most strongly construed against the petitioner) that the exercise of ordinary diligence by the plaintiff, as construed by the Supreme Court, would have obviated the injury of which he complains, in that it does not appear that he did not know of the ditch and could not see its condition, or allege any unusual emergency making it necessary for him to take the risk of crossing such a ditch. The petition avers that the road he was travel-ling was, “as to travelers upon said road,” the only way, but gives no reason why plaintiff had to travel. The judgment of the lower court in overruling the demurrer is therefore Reversed.