Columbus Railroad v. Asbell
This text of 66 S.E. 902 (Columbus Railroad v. Asbell) 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
According to the petition, the plaintiff’s husband had safely alighted from the car which transported him to the intersection of Fifteenth street and First avenue. He then ceased to be a passenger. Augusta Ry. Co. v. Glover, 92 Ga. 132 (14), 148 (18 S. E. 406). After leaving the car he advanced three or four steps between the parallel tracks of the defendant until he reached First avenue and then turned southward on that thoroughfare at the intersection with Fifteenth street; and just as he was passing over the parallel track of the defendant, he was stricken by a car .running on that track. He was not a trespasser, and the railroad company owed him a duty to exercise ordinary diligence to prevent injuring him, and he likewise was under duty to exercise the same diligence to save himself from injury. The servants of the railroad company were running the car which killed him at an excessive and dangerous rate of speed while approaching a street crossing where pedestrians were likely to be, and without sounding a gong or giving other warning. Surely it was a question for the jury to say whether the railroad company exercised the proper care in the running of the car which killed the plaintiff’s husband. On the other hand, do the facts alleged compel a conclusive inference that the plaintiff’s husband failed to exercise ordinary care for his own safety and protection? When a person knowingly and voluntarily puts himself in a place of immediate and obvious peril or exposure to injury, without some reason of necessity or propriety in so doing, and injury happens to him in consequence of his being in that place, he is not allowed to recover, notwithstanding the party may negligently injure him. An illustration of this rule may be found in the late case of Harris v. Southern Ry. Co., 129 Ga. 388 (58 S. E. 873), where a plaintiff was denied recovery for an injury occasioned [576]*576by being struck by an engine, because, with a knowledge of the impending danger, he stepped on the track of the railroad company and attempted to cross immediately in front of the moving engine, although it appeared that the agents of the railroad company may have been negligent. Such cases stand upon a different footing from those in which the arrangements of a street-car company for the accommodation of persons-in taking and leaving ears afford a' reasonable justification to the party being on the track, and thus exposed to the dangers incident to such a position. In such a case the court will not declare the person so negligent as to bar him of recovery, unless his whole conduct, viewed in the light of his environment and all the circumstances, demands a finding that he was lacking in ordinary care for his own protection and safety. If the facts afford an inference that the person injured did exercise ordinary care, his negligence or diligence should be left to be decided by the jury, and the court should not attempt to decide the ultimate fact by a preponderance of evidence. Atlanta Con. St. Ry. Co. v. Bates, 103 Ga. 333 (30 S. E. 41); Macon Ry. Sc. Co. v. Streyer, 123 Ca. 279 (51 S. E. 342). Measured by this rule, we can not say, as matter of law, that plaintiff’s husband, according to the allegations of the petition, was guilty of negligence which debarred the plaintiff’s recovery. He got off the car at a street crossing; the car was so constructed that he might alight from either side; the company neither by word nor act warned him of any danger which might come from alighting on the side next to the parallel track; he walked three or four steps to reach the street upon which his business house was located, and then turned southward on that street in a direct route to his destination. He was crossing the track at a place where pedestrians had the right to cross. A brilliant electric street light was burning, the effect of which was to confine his vision within the circle of its shadow; the North Highlands car had not turned from Broad street into Fifteenth street when he alighted from the Bose Hill car. The departing Bose Hill car made such a loud and rumbling noise that he could not hear the rapidly approaching ear, which gave no warning of its approach. These were the conditions which surrounded the plaintiff’s husband when he started to his place of business, and just as he was passing over the parallel track he was struck by the North Highlands car, running at an excessive and dangerous speed, and hurled [577]*57735 feet. The conduct of the plaintiffs husband should be weighed by a jury to determine whether he used due care, both in leaving the car on the side next to the parallel track, and in attempting to cross Fifteenth street at the intersection of First avenue in the manner he did.
Judgment affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
66 S.E. 902, 133 Ga. 573, 1909 Ga. LEXIS 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/columbus-railroad-v-asbell-ga-1909.