Binion v. Georgia Southern & Florida Ry. Co.
This text of 41 S.E. 646 (Binion v. Georgia Southern & Florida Ry. Co.) 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.
Opinion
The plaintiff in error brought his action against the railway company, to recover damages for personal injuries which he alleged he had sustained while attempting to couple cars in the discharge of his duties as an employee of the company in the capacity of a train-hand or brakeman. The defendant denied liabil[331]*331ity, and the trial was entered into in the superior court of Dooly county. At the conclusion of the evidence a verdict was directed by the presiding judge. The plaintiff in error excepted to this action of the judge, sued out a bill of exceptions, and assigned error thereon. This court ruled that the direction of the verdict was error, for the reason that the evidence was conflicting on the main issues in the case. Ill Ga. 878. On the second trial the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff. The defendant made a motion for a new trial on a number of grounds, and the motion was granted by the presiding judge in the following order: “ On the first trial of this case the court was of the opinion that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover, and directed a verdict in accordance with that opinion. The Supreme Court reversed that judgment, holding that there were certain issues that should have been submitted to the jury. I do not understand, by this reversal, that the trial court was to be bound by the finding of the jury on those issues. If I so considered it, I most certainly would not interfere with the verdict last rendered. If such was the effect of the judgment of reversal, I have no reason to doubt that a second reversal will follow. . . . After a careful review of the record in this case, I am of the opinion that the verdict is contrary to evidence, without evidence to support it, and under the facts of this case a verdict in favor of the plaintiff is illegal and contrary to the law.”. It is now. contended by the plaintiff in error, with earnestness, that the questions made by the present record are res ad judicata, and that the only question made therein was made in the former trial of this case and passed upon by this court; and it is insisted, for these reasons, that the judgment of the trial judge granting the motion for a new trial should be reversed. The main issues on the former trial were: (1) Whether the employee’s failure to get a coupling-stick was due to fault on his part or on the part of the company. (2) Whether the non-observance of the rule to make all couplings with sticks was so general as to raise the presumption that such non-observance was so known to the company as to lead the employee, although he was shown by the evidence to have had full notice of the rule, to believe that it was abrogated. (3) Whether there was any negligence on the part of the company in running the train back to make the coupling. It is true that the s,ame issues arise under the evidence in the present case; but in passing [332]*332upon the question whether the trial judge erred in directing a verdict for the defendant on the first trial, while saying that the evidence on these issues was conflicting, this court did not pass on the degree of conflict which was raised by the evidence on that trial.
Judgment affirmed.
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41 S.E. 646, 115 Ga. 330, 1902 Ga. LEXIS 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/binion-v-georgia-southern-florida-ry-co-ga-1902.