Augusta Railway Co. v. Glover

18 S.E. 406, 92 Ga. 132
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 5, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by79 cases

This text of 18 S.E. 406 (Augusta Railway Co. v. Glover) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Augusta Railway Co. v. Glover, 18 S.E. 406, 92 Ga. 132 (Ga. 1893).

Opinion

Bleckley, Chief Justice.

1. The material contents of the declaration are stated in the official report. A legal cause of action under the act of 1887 was set forth. It was not necessary to allege that the deceased could not have seen the car approaching him in time to avoid coming in collision with it, or that he made any effort to avoid coming in collision with it. It was not necessary to allege that the point at which he left the car was the regular stopping place, or that the stopping of the ear was for the purpose of taking on or letting off passengers. It was not necessary to allege that he gave any notice of his desire or intention to leave the car or that defendant’s servants had notice of such intention. It was not necessary to allege that the company had notice of his want of familiarity with the running and operation of electric [142]*142cars, or anything as to his size or appearance. The plaintiff’s right of action did not depend upon widowhood or living apart from her husband, and as she alleged dependence on this son, although he was only between fifteen and sixteen years of age, it was not necessary to allege in what way she was dependent on him or that he had ever worked or earned money. The declaration imputes the homicide to the negligence of the company and points out specifically in what respects the company was negligent. The plaintiff’s right to sue and to recover for the negligent homicide of her son is sufficiently apparent on the face of the declaration. There was no error in overruling the demurrer.

2. The motion to strike from the declaration the words, “ that the said John C. Glover was not familiar with the manner in which said cars of the defendant were run and operated; that he resided in the country and had never before ridden on said electric cars,” was properly denied, the motion to strike being made orally at the trial. If these words were objectionable as having no appropriate place in the declaration, the right mode of expelling them was by special demurrer filed at the appearance term. It would be altogether impracticable for the court, when the trial is on hand, to entertain motions to purge the pleadings of superfluous and irrelevant matter whether of form or of substance. The pleadings so far as possible should be settled before the trial term arrives, and this is the scheme of our law, except in so far as voluntary amendments are concerned. These, as matter of light, may be made at any stage of the case.

3. The special plea to the effect that the plaintiff and her son were both residents of South Carolina and that she has resided there ever since, presented no defence to the action. The statutory right is given by the act of 1887 to all mothers, no matter where they reside, and [143]*143without reference to the residence of the child whose homicide is the subject-matter of the action. Whenever a Georgia mother can recover, any other mother can do so under like circumstances. The act is general in its terms and has no hint of any discrimination in favor of residents or against non-residents.

4. Neither as a plea in abatement nor as one in bar is the pendency of a suit by the father of a minor son, for the damage occasioned to him by the loss of the son’s services or in any other respect, any defence to an action by the mother founded on the act of 1887. By the terms of that act the mother is entitled to recover the whole value of the life. A claim by the father and a suit to enforce that claim, whether it be well founded or not, cannot defeat or abridge the statutory right of the mother to bring her action and maintain it. If there is an exclusive right in either parent to complain of the homicide, it is certainly not in the father. But the truth is there is no exclusive right, for the same tortious injury resulting in the death of a minor child may be a damage to both, to the mother in the arbitrary measure of damages prescribed by the statute, and to the father to the extent of his own loss, irrespective of the statute, whatever that loss may be. The act of 1887 does not-purport to withdraw from the father any right of action which he had before by the common law. What it does is to confer upon the mother a right which neither of the parents had at common law. The statutory right of the mother is to recover for the child’s death; the common law right of the father is to recover for the loss of services which the child would have rendered him had the child not been disabled by the tort complained of. Augusta Factory v. Davis, 87 Ga. 648.

5. There was no error in admitting evidence of the father’s physical disability and consequent impairment of ability to labor. He was a laboring man and with[144]*144out fortune. This being so, anything which reduced his capacity to perform labor whereby to procure' the means of support for the plaintiff, his wife, would render her less independent of any aid from her children, including the deceased son. The evidence therefore would tend to show her partial dependence on that son for support present and future. The disability referred to had its origin long before the homicide of the son, and was in some degree operative at the time of the homicide and has been so ever since.

6. The father, mother and minor children all resided together and were mutually dependent upon the labor of the family for support. The deceased child, although not sixteen years of age, performed some labor, and it or its proceeds went into the common stock. Evidence to prove all this, or which tended to prove it, was admissible, and if this condition of affairs was established, the deceased son might well be considered as contributing substantially to the support of his mother. Members of the same household who live by their common labor and its. proceeds have a mutual dependence one upon another. Certainly so unless it be affirmatively shown that a particular member consumes as much, or more, of the common stock than he contributes to it. Even that would not be a conclusive test, for the services of a child to a mother or of a mother to a child may well be reckoned as contributing substantially to the support of the recipient far beyond any money value which the services may have, and the chief element of dependence may be in respect to-personal services of this nature. Moreover, in the case of laboring people some regard must be had to the probability of future dependence of an older member of the family upon younger ones. A son between fifteen and sixteen years of age whose vocation it is to labor for the family may well be regarded as one of the stays and props, both [145]*145present and future, of Ms mother, she being also a laboring woman and liable to become disabled by age or infirmity before her son shall have passed the meridian of life.

7. Evidence that the son had no previous experience in traveling upon an electric car was admissible, not for the purpose of changing or affecting the measure of the company’s diligence, but as a fact tending to illustrate the cause of his failure to alight in safety. The jury in looking at the facts and circumstances of the homicide would naturally desire to classify the particular passenger, not alone by his age but also by his experience or the want of it in handling himself as a passenger on electric cars. Familiarity with this mode of transportation would qualify him to see and appreciate danger which he would not be likely to observe if he was wholly without experience. With experience he might be chargeable with fault; without it with none.

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Bluebook (online)
18 S.E. 406, 92 Ga. 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/augusta-railway-co-v-glover-ga-1893.