105 Ga. 100 | Ga. | 1898
It may be stated as a general rule, that one who goes upon the track or premises of a railroad company, except
According to these authorities, the petition, which under the demurrer must be taken as true, shows that the railroad company was guilty of wilful or wanton negligence in allowing the engine in charge of its servants to collide with or run against the unknown man, and thus being negligent, this act on its part must be held the proximate and efficient cause of the injury which the plaintiff sustained by reason of the body of the unknown man being hurled, perforce of the blow inflicted by the engine, against him. The negligence of the defendant put in motion the destructive agency, and the injury sustained by the plaintiff was directly attributable thereto, and there was no intervention of a new force or power of itself sufficient to stand as the cause of the mischief; there was no pew and independent force acting in and of itself causing the injury, and superseding the original wrong so as to make it remote in the chain of caustion; there was no interposition of a separate independ agency over which the defendant neither had nor exercised «
The court- committed no error in overruling the demurrer to the petition.
Judgment affirmed.