129 Ga. 204 | Ga. | 1907
(After stating the facts.)
Counsel for plaintiff in error cite the case of Brunswick & Western R. Co. v. Wiggins, 113 Ga. 842 (39 S. E. 551, 61 L. R. A. 513), to sustain the contention that the charge complained of in the present case amounted to an instruction to the jury to find for the plaintiff, if her husband and the railroad company were equally at fault. The ruling in the case cited does not sustain this contention. In that case, "after instructing the jury that no person should recover damages from a railroad company for injury to himself or property, where the same is done by his consent or because' of his negligence, and that if the deceased and the
In reaching our conclusion that the exception to the charge in the present case was not well taken, we have not overlooked the ease of Atlanta Railway & Power Co. v. Gaston, 118 Ga. 418 (45 S. E. 508), where the court charged on the doctrine of comparative negligence, and also that “the defendant might relieve itself of the statutory presumption by showing that its agents exercised .all proper care and diligence to avoid the injury; or that the damage was caused by the negligence of the plaintiff; or that the plaintiff could have, by the exercise of ordinary care, avoided the injury caused by defendant’s negligence; and on either or all of these grounds the defendant may rest its defense.” It was held that as there was evidence from which the jury could have found that both parties were in the exercise of ordinary care, and that the injury was the result of an accident, it was error for the court, when in its charge it undertook to enumerate the various grounds ■of defense which the defendant could set up to relieve itself from the statutory presumption of negligence arising from proof of the injury by the running of its cars, to omit from such enumeration the ground of defense that the injury was the result of a casualty. In the opinion it was said: “When under the evidence there are four ways in which the company might relieve itself of the presumption raised by the statute, and the judge only charged as to three, it was the equivalent of saying that the fourth method —in this case an accident — would not relieve from the presumption.” The headnote in that case, when considered in connection with what is said in the opinion as to the exact point decided and the reasons therefor, contains nothing which, even by implication, is in conflict with the ruling in the present case.
Judgment affirmed.