9 Ga. App. 154 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1911
In the present case death did not result from the injury. The plaintiff was hurt by the running of the cars, and on the subject of burden of proof and presumption of negligence the court charged the jury as follows: “In a ease of this character the burden is upon the plaintiff to show that he was injured, and injured by the negligence of the railroad company, or that he was injured by the railroad company, and not from the want of the exercise of ordinary care and diligence upon his part. In other words, if he shows by the evidence that he was injured by the defendant company, and that it was on account of the negligence of the defendant company, and without the want of the exercise of ordinary care and diligence upon his part, then the burden is upon the defendant to show that it exercised ordinary care and diligence and was not guilty of neglect. I charge you, gentlemen, that in order to make the principle that I have given you in charge clear to you, I repeat just here that the burden is upon the plaintiff to show one of two things: If he shows by the evidence that he was injured while at work as an employee of the defendant company, and that it was not because of the want of the exercise of ordinary care and diligence on his part, then the burden would be upon the defendant to show that it had exercised ordinary care and diligence in the matter; or, if the plaintiff showed that he was injured by the negligence of. the defendant company in the discharge of his duty, then the burden would be upon the defendant to show that the plaintiff was wanting in the exercise of ordinary care 'and diligence.” Immediately following this, the court explained to the jury that the plaintiff could recover
The question arises as to what the Civil Code. (1910), §2782, means when it says that, “if death does not result from the injury, the presumption of negligence shall be and remain as now provided by law in case of injury received by an emploj^ee in the sendee of a railroad company,” and as to what it is necessary for an injured employee to show in order to raise a presumption of negligence against the defendant and to make a prima facie case for recovery. The rule as to presumption of negligence in cases of injury to railroad employees, existing at the time of the passage of the act of 1909, and the reasons on which the -rule was based, may be stated thus: If the injury was caused by the running of the cars or machinery, or was directly occasioned by an act of an employee, then under the statute now embodied in the Civil Code (1910), § 2780, a presumption arose that the negligence of the company or of some of its employees had caused the injury. If the plaintiff was not himself one of the employees engaged in the act from which the presumption of negligence arose, he might, upon proof of the injury, rest his case, so far as negligence was concerned, upon the presumption; and, damages being shown, he might make a prima facie case for recovery upon this proof alone. On the other hand, if the thing through which the damage was done was a thing in which the plaintiff himself was participating, the rule was to be differently applied. In that case, since the plaintiff was himself an employee of the company, and since he could not recover if he was at fault, and since the presumption which arose from the transactions mentioned in the statute did not fix the blame on one employee rather than on another, — upon some fellow servant rather than upon the plaintiff, who was'also a servant participating in the act from which the presumption arose, — it was necessary for the plaintiff to prove something more, in order to fix the blame which the law allowed to be presumed from the happening of the iniurv.
This resulted in the formulation of the rule that the plaintiff might make a prima facie case for recovery,- even where he himself was connected with the transaction in which his injuries were received, by showing that the transaction was one of those as to which a presumption of negligence arises under the Civil Code (1910), § 2780, and that he was free from fault, or by proving, without the aid of this presumption, that the defendant or a fellow servant was guilty of the negligence alleged in the petition. This is the rule, and the reason of the rule, as declared in many cases decided prior to the passage of the act of 1909. See Central R. Co. v. Kelly, 58 Ga. 107, 113; Central R. Co. v. Sears, 59 Ga. 436; W. & A. R. Co. v. Vandiver, 85 Ga. 470 (11 S. E. 781); Atlanta & Birmingham Ry. v. McManus, 1 Ga. App. 302, 307 (58 S. E. 258). At the time this rule was formulated the court did not have in mind the doctrine, subsequently developed, that the negligence presumed under section 2780, supra, relates only to the acts of negligence charged in the petition. It may be seen that if the only acts of negligence charged in the petition are acts of the defendant, or of its servants other than the plaintiff, and the only negligence to' be- presumed under the code section cited is that charged in the petition, it would not be necessary, in strict logic, for the plaintiff to do more, in order to cast the presumption, than to prove that he was injured in one of the ways specified in the code section; for with the presumption thus limited in its operation, there would be nothing presumed against the plaintiff. Hence, the two doctrines are somewhat inconsistent; but both were well established at the timé of the passage of the act of 1909.'
That act did not affect the existing presumptions, so far as an employee injured, but not killed, is concerned. It only varied the degree of blame by which the plaintiff’s right of action .would be de
Following this, we announce the rule under the present státnte
Judgment affirmed.