42 Ga. App. 603 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1931
(After stating the foregoing facts.)
(2-7) It appears to us that the plaintiff’s own evidence, emphatic and unequivocal, disproved his own cause of action, the only difficulty encountered by the court being that there was testimony to the effect that previous to the injury the plaintiff had been sent away from the bank, bench, or terrace where he was working loading the skip-board, on some other errand pertaining to his master’s business, and that while he was absent for something over an hour on such mission, the position of the cable used in
Counsel for defendant in error insist very strongly, irrespective of what the plaintiff himself might have said as to it being his own duty to get to a place of safety without further notice or warning than the mere signal “heads up” after the chains had been attached to the skip-board, that according to the evidence of Eate Hall, whose duty it was to give the signal to move the skip-board after he (Hall) had observed that the chains had been attached, it
The case has given us considerable concern, especially as our judgment turns largely upon the testimony of the plaintiff himself, who appears, if ever a plaintiff did, to have been willing to concede any and every thing against his own interest, but, under his own testimony, which we do not think is contrary to that of Hall and Goins, we do not see how the verdict in plaintiff’s favor can be allowed to stand.
Since there is to be another trial and the other assignments of error relate to matters not likely to arise on that trial, it is not necessary to deal with them here.
Judgment reversed.