96 Ga. 42 | Ga. | 1895
It appears from the evidence, that the plaintiff’ went to the railway station for the purpose of assisting his sister and three small children upon one of the regular passenger-trains of the defendant. Upon the arrival of the train he went to the conductor and told him of his intention to assist them on the train, and the conductor saw him preparing to get on. The plaintiff’ went into a car with his sister and the children, and when they were seated, started to get off’, but the train began moving before he could do so. He stepped down the steps of the platform, holding the railing with his left hand, and was about to step off when the train gave a sudden jerk, which caused him to fall, and the car passed over his foot. The train ivas moving slowly; the plaintiff’ supposed it was going at the rate of about three miles an hour. It was the custom of the defendant, at this station, to give signals before the train started. The bell would ring and the conductor would holloa, “all aboard,” and
We think the court erred in granting a nonsuit. It is not necessarily, as matter of law, negligent for a person to leave a moving train. Whether it is negligent or not in a particular case must depend upon the circumstances of danger attending the act and the special justification which the person leaving the train had for doing so. Ordinarily, in cases of this kind, the question of what is or is not negligence is one for the jury; and unless the danger is obviously great, — as where the train is moving at full speed, — the court cannot hold that leaving the train is, as a matter of law, such negligence as should preclude a recovery. (See Covington v. Railroad Co., 81 Ga. 273.) The cases relied upon by counsel for the defendant in error, in support of the holding of the court below, are distinguishable from the present case. In the case of Coleman v. Railroad Company, 84 Ga. 1, the decision was not placed upon the ground that the plaintiff’ was negligent in stepping off the train, but upon the ground that the railroad company was under no duty to the plaintiff', it not appearing that the conductor or any other proper agent of the company knew that he had come aboard the train, nor that there was any usage or custom to give notice or make signals for the benefit of such visitors. In the case of McLaren v. Railroad Co., 85 Ga. 504, the facts were similar to those in the Coleman case, supra. Besides, in that case the train,