115 Ga. 624 | Ga. | 1902
Stewart sued the Railway Company for damages. At the trial the court granted a nonsuit, and to this judgment the
The plaintiff alleged in his petition that the defendant was negligent in two particulars: first, that the defendant negligently furnished unsafe machinery and appliances for the use of the plaintiff and an unsafe place for him to work; that the appliances, means, and brakes for stopping the car, which were furnished to him, were not sufficient for that purpose; and, second, that the defendant negligently failed to inspect and superintend the machinery and appliances which were furnished to the plaintiff, and if these appliances and machinery had been inspected the defect in them could have been discovered by the defendant. The evidence failed to establish the allegation that the defendant negligently furnished an improper appliance for the use of the plaintiff in bringing the timber from the place where it was located to the shops. There was nothing in the evidence from which a jury could find that the place at
Error is assigned upon the refusal of the judge to permit the plaintiff to testify that the foreman of. the men who managed the push-car said, fifteen or twenty minutes after the accident, that there -ought to have been leathers on the car; and the plaintiff replied to this, if it would do. any good, to put leathers on another car then in use, as it might prevent another accident. Under the view we have taken of the case, this evidence was immaterial. Whether the case be considered solely in the light of the evidence admitted, or in the light of that admitted together with the evidence rejected, the result should be the same.
Judgment affirmed.