25 Ga. App. 438 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1920
Mrs. Mary Winn sued the Southern Bailway Com
• (a) The jury were authorized to find that the plaintiff’s son was found beside the railroad-track, dead, with bruises about his head; the doctors disagreed (or perhaps we should say did not testify in accord) as to the kind of instrument that likely made the wound. For the purposes of this case it may be conceded that the jury were authorized to find that the deceased came to his death
(6) The presumption raised by section 2780 is a rule of evidence and not a presumption of law, and may be rebutted, either by the testimony of the plaintiff or by that of the defendant.
(c) The presumption raised by section 2780 is raised only as to the specific acts of negligence alleged in the plaintiff’s petition as the proximate cause of the injury alleged. The presumption is not raised with respect to negligence (if there be such) which is not pleaded. See Georgia So. &c. Ry. Co. v. Thornton, 144 Ga. 484 (87 S. E. 388), and cit.
(d) The evidence for the plaintiff, (and it may here be stated that the defendant offered no testimony) disproved every act of negligence alleged by the plaintiff which could have been the proximate cause of the homicide. Indeed, the only deduction that can be drawn from the evidence is that there is no foundation in point of fact for any of the plaintiff’s allegations of negligence. Since the plaintiff must rcover upon the specific acts of negligence pleaded, if she recovers at all, the verdict in favor of the defendant was demanded. It was error to grant the motion for a new trial.
Judgment reversed.