Atlantic Coast Line Railroad v. Adeeb

84 S.E. 316, 15 Ga. App. 842
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 16, 1915
Docket5571
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 84 S.E. 316 (Atlantic Coast Line Railroad v. Adeeb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad v. Adeeb, 84 S.E. 316, 15 Ga. App. 842 (Ga. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Wade, J.

Mrs. Louise Adeeb filed suit against tlie Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company and the Georgia Southern & Florida Railway Company, alleging that she had suffered various injuries on account of a collision which occurred through the concurrent negligence of the defendants at a grade crossing in the city of Yaldosta, Georgia. Each defendant filed a special plea setting up accord and satisfaction, the issue raised by which was determined in each instance in favor of the plaintiff. The court, at the conclusion of the evidence for the plaintiff, granted a nonsuit as to the Georgia Southern & Florida Railway Company, but that company nevertheless filed a motion for a new trial of the issue raised by its special plea; and it brought the case to this court on exception to the refusal of the motion. The ease proceeded to a verdict and judgment against the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company, and that defendant filed its motion for a new trial not only of the issue determined by the trial on the special plea, but also of the issue raised by its plea to the merits. The motion was overruled and the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company excepted to that judgment, and also to the overruling of its demurrer to the plaintiff’s petition. We take up the various exceptions in the order in which they occur.

1. It is admitted in the brief for the plaintiff in error that the court did not err in overruling the general demurrer, which alleged that the petition set out no cause of action. In grounds 2 and 3 of the demurrer it is contended that the allegations of the petition [844]*844show that the defendants were not joint tort-feasors and were not jointly liable to the plaintiff in any manner, and that there were no joint acts on their part. The petition alleges in the 5th paragraph that when the passenger-train of the Atlantic Coast Line Eailroad Company, on which the plaintiff was riding as a passenger, reached the point in the city of Yaldosta where the main track of that road crosses the main line of the Georgia Southern & Florida Kailway Company, and as the passenger-train approached the crossing and started to make its passage over the same, “by reason of the fact that the agents, servants, and employees of the said Atlantic Coast Line Eailroad Company, in charge of said locomotive and train, and the agents, servants, and employees of the said Geor-, gia Southern & Florida Eailway Company, in charge of a different locomotive and cars hereafter more fully described, and at the said time being operated along the said track of the said Georgia Southern & Florida Eailway Company, negligently attempted and endeavored to drive or cause the said respective trains and locomotives to pass over the said crossing at the same time, the said respective trains and locomotives collided with great force and violence.” In the next paragraph the petition set out that the violent stopping and jerking of the train incident to the collision between the train on which the plaintiff was riding and the train on the track of the Georgia Southern & Florida Eailway Company resulted in various injuries to the plaintiff, and the 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th, 11th, 12th, and 13th paragraphs attempted to set out in detail the precise nature of the physical injuries suffered by the plaintiff, her age, occupation, and earning capacity, etc., and the extent to which her earning capacity had been impaired by these injuries, and also the medical and other necessary expenses incurred by her on account thereof. The 15th paragraph merely sets forth facts explaining the inability of the plaintiff to more definitely describe the locomotive and train of the Georgia Southern & Florida Eailway Company, which came in contact with the train upon which she was a passenger. The 16th paragraph is as follows: “The acts of negligence, and the lack of diligence hereinbefore generally referred to, causing the injuries to the petitioner set out, are as follows: (a) Because there was neither an automatic interlocking and derailing switch, nor a signal tower in which an operator was continually kept at the place where the separate tracks of the [845]*845said defendants crossed each other. (6) Because the engine, drivers and conductors in charge of the said respective trains and locomotives did not cause the said respective trains and locomotives or either of them .to come to a full stop within fifty feet of said crossing and then move forward slowly, (c) Because the engine drivers in charge of the said respective trains and locomotives did not approach said crossing slowly, but at a rapid and dangerous rate of speed, to wit, at the rate of fifteen or twenty miles per hour. (d) Because the said engine drivers and other servants in charge of said respective trains and locomotives did not keep a proper lookout for the purpose of detecting the presence of other trains, near and in the act of passing over the crossing. (e) Because the said engine drivers in charge of the said respective trains and locomotives in approaching said crossing ran their respective engines at such a high rate of speed that they could not stop when they each discovered the presence of the other near said crossing. (†) Because it was gross negligence on the part of both of the said defendants, their agents, servants, and employees, to attempt to pass over the said crossing at the same time.”

It appears, from an inspection of the 5th paragraph of the petition, taken in connection with the 16th paragraph, that the plaintiff distinctly alleges that the collision and the injury occurred because the servants and employees of each of the two defendant companies, in charge of the two locomotives and trains then being operated on the respective tracks of the defendants, “negligently attempted and endeavored to drive or cause the. said respective trains and locomotives to pass over the said crossing at the same time.” From the allegations in the 5th paragraph it would appear that the concurrent negligence of both defendants was necessary to bring about the disastrous results to the plaintiff which followed from the collision. Had the crew of either train observed proper caution, without regard to the question as to which train was properly entitled to precedence over the other in effecting this passage over the dangerous crossing, the injury could not have resulted, and hence the injury was necessarily a consequence of the concurrent negligence of both, though the proximate cause of the injury and the consequent legal liability therefor to the plaintiff might depend' exclusively upon the negligence of one. ■ Then from the 16th paragraph it appears that the train crews of both defendants [846]*846are charged with negligence in that they both did not cause their respective trains and locomotives, or either of them, to come to a full stop within fifty feet of the crossing, and then move forward slowly; because the engine drivers in charge of both locomotives and trains failed to approach the crossing slowly, but approached it at the rapid and dangerous rate of 15 or 20 miles per hour; and further that the injury resulted on account of the negligence of the servants in charge of both locomotives and trains in, failing to keep a proper lookout for the purpose of detecting the presence of other trains near and in the act of passing over the crossing; and because both trains approached the crossing at such a high rate of speed (15 or 20 miles per hour) that they could not stop when each discovered the presence of the other near the crossing; and that there was gross negligence on the part of both defendants in attempting to pass over the crossing at the same time.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 S.E. 316, 15 Ga. App. 842, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlantic-coast-line-railroad-v-adeeb-gactapp-1915.