Cordray v. Savannah Electric Co.

63 S.E. 710, 5 Ga. App. 625, 1909 Ga. App. LEXIS 91
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 16, 1909
Docket1119
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 63 S.E. 710 (Cordray v. Savannah Electric Co.) 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
Cordray v. Savannah Electric Co., 63 S.E. 710, 5 Ga. App. 625, 1909 Ga. App. LEXIS 91 (Ga. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

Russell, J.

(After stating the facts.)

It is not necessary to review the judgment of the lower court upon the special demurrer. While it is true that when a special demurrer calls for information to which the defendant is entitled, and the court has considered the special demurrer first and has directed an amendment, and the information is not furnished by the necessary amendment, the presumption may be indulged that if the amendment were made according to the true facts, it would be shown that the plaintiff had no cause of action. In the present case, however, the judge passed upon the special and the general demurrers together; and, so far as appears, no amendment to meet the objections of the special demurrer was ordered. And it is unnecessary for us to consider the special demurrer for the further reason that it is only when a petition is so defective that, by reason of its failure to set forth a cause' of ■ action, it could not withstand a'general demurrer, that failure to supply the information which is called for by the special demurrer can properly be said to raise a presumption that a fuller averment of all the facts in relation to the transaction would show that the plaintiff, even if permitted to amend, would still have no cause of action, and that, therefore, the petition should be dismissed upon the [629]*629general demurrer. We think the petition set forth a good cause of action, without amendment.

According to the allegations of the petition, the plaintiff was standing with quite a crowd of other persons in a thoroughfare, listening to the “spiel” of a street vender. No reason appears why he did not have the right to be there. He was standing outside the curve of a track which went around the corner of a street that crossed the street in which he was standing,— Whitaker street, — and also at the side of a track which did not go around the corner, but proceeded in a straight line along Whitaker street. A street-car of the defendant company, moving along Whitaker street, comes to the corner or intersection of the two streets, and stops to discharge passengers, or for some other necessary purpose. The servants of the street-railway company having the car in charge can see that there is a large crowd in the street and near the railway tracks. These employees know that the ear, instead of going straightforward (as the plaintiff and others might suppose it is going to do), is going to turn around the curve. They know that the car is a long car, and they are charged with knowledge of the fact, if it is a fact (and the demurrer admits that it is), that the rear of such long cars, when propelled rapidly around a corner, swings outward from the curve for some distance. These employees see that the crowd is engrossed with the acts and sayings of the street vender. Can a railway company, under such circumstances, assert by demurrer the absolute right to so use a thoroughfare dedicated to the use of the public as to proceed rapidly around the curve without giving bystanders any warning as to which track the car will take, and claim, if any one should be knocked down and injured by the swing of the rear end of the car, that there was no duty to give him warning, and that it was his duty to know that the car would go around the corner, instead of pursuing a straightforward course along the street it had been traveling previous to this stoppage? We think not; and for this reason we are satisfied that the learned trial judge erred in sustaining the demurrer and dismissing the petition. Upon our first consideration of the record we were inclined to think that the trial judge was right, but maturer reflection has convinced us that the tendency -to forget that all questions of negligence are exclusively for the [630]*630jury influenced us (as it did the judge of the lower court) to assume to decide what it is the exclusive province of the jury to determine, to wit, whether certain acts, under a particular state of circumstances, are or are not negligence on the part of a defendant as related to the plaintiff, in the particular situation in which the plaintiff found himself.

At first blush it may seem that one who knows that he is standing in a public street traversed by a street-railway using the necessary, but at the same time dangerous, instrumentality of heavy and rapidly moving cars, which has the right to use the street, and who allows himself to become engrossed in some subject other than his own safety, is so negligent that his contributory negligence is great enough to defeat a recovery in case he should be injured in the manner stated, even by negligence on the part of the street-railway company. Again, it must be borne in mind that, in a certain -sense, a street-railway company has, and must necessarily have, larger rights upon that portion of the street occupied by its track, and upon such lateral extension of this space on each side of its track as is necessary for the passage of its ears, than a pedestrian; for the reason that the law must look to the greatest good of the greatest number, and that if the rule were otherwise, one pedestrian occupying the track could compel the stoppage of a street-car and thereby inconvenience and delay the journey of perhaps a hundred passengers in the street-ear, each one of whom, as a citizen, is as much entitled to the use of the street as the particular pedestrian whose occupancy of the track has prevented the passage of the car. But while this is true, it is the duty of street-railway companies and their employees to use all due diligence to avoid injury to any citizen who is in. the street. See Macon Ry. & Light Co. v. Barnes, 121 Ga. 445 (49 S. E. 282), and cit. And as to a person who is on the street, and is not standing either on the track or any other portion of it necessary for the ordinary running of the ears, the rate of speed must be such as would not injure one occupying the position just stated. One who is standing in a street, out of the ordinary passageway of a street-car, has the right to presume that the ear will not be run at such a rate of speed or so negligently in any other respect as to leave the tracks and, running beyond the space usually necessary for its locomotion, inflict injury upon [631]*631him. Likewise, one who is standing so far from the. curve of a street-car track that in 'the proper and ordinary running of the cars he would not be affected by the swing of the car has the right to presume that he is safe, if he is at a position in the street beyond the point where the end of the ear would reach when run at a proper rate of speed and in an ordinary, prudent manner. So the whole question, as to whether a street-railway company, in injuring one who is in the street by knocking him down, is guilty of negligence because the car was propelled too rapidly around the curve (if it was run too rapidly), is one for the jury, and may by a jury be determined by ascertaining whether he was at a point in the street (even though the point was near the track) where he would have been safe if the car had been properly managed and not run at an unusual rate of speed.

.In what has been said so far, we have dealt with the ease upon the supposition that the pedestrian who is in the street knows or has reason to know that the schedule of the car is such that it will necessarily turn the curve, even though there be two tracks, one going around the corner and one going straightforward in the same direction in which the car can be seen to be moving.

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Bailey v. Georgia Railway & Power Co.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 S.E. 710, 5 Ga. App. 625, 1909 Ga. App. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cordray-v-savannah-electric-co-gactapp-1909.