133 Ga. 33 | Ga. | 1909
The defendant in error brought suit against the plaintiff in error for damages, making the following allegations: “That petitioner lives about one mile from the court-house in the town of Douglasville, Ga., and that on the 13th day of October, 1905, petitioner boarded what was then known and called the accommodation train in Atlanta, Ga., leaving the terminal station at 6 :15 p. m. He had purchased a ticket to Douglasville, Ga., and when he reached Douglasville he paid the conductor in charge of said train ten cents to ride to a point near one mile ■west of the depot in said town of Douglasville. This was known and called West End, where he expected to alight and where he was entitled to be delivered by said train. The conductor said to petitioner that he would stop the car that evening at the road crossing known as West End, and just as the crossing was reached the conductor called out all off for West End. Petitioner followed the conductor to the front end of the car after the conductor had so announced and was carried to a point 100 or 150 yards
As to the three remaining assignments of error in the amendment to the motion for a new trial, two -of them are not referred to in the brief of counsel for the plaintiff in error, and will ha treated as abandoned; and the other one it is unnecessary to deal with, since it relates to a matter not likely to occur on another trial.
Judgment reversed,.