McCoy v. Central of Georgia Railway Co.

62 S.E. 297, 131 Ga. 378, 1908 Ga. LEXIS 89
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedAugust 19, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 62 S.E. 297 (McCoy v. Central of Georgia Railway 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.

Bluebook
McCoy v. Central of Georgia Railway Co., 62 S.E. 297, 131 Ga. 378, 1908 Ga. LEXIS 89 (Ga. 1908).

Opinion

Beck, J.

(After stating the facts.)

The plaintiff’s cause of action, as declared on in this ease, was for damages' resulting from personal injuries alleged to have been sustained in consequence of the failure upon the part of the agents and employees of the. defendant company to observe the requirements of the statute, mairing it the duty of the engineer to blow the whistle of the locomotive and to check the speed of the train as required under the provision of §2222 of the Civil Code. While there was a general allegation, in specifying the acts of negligence of which the defendant was guilty, that the agents of the defendant, operating the train, failed to slacken the speed of the same before reaching the crossing, and after the time when they saw or in the exercise of ordinary care could have seen that plaintiff was in a perilous [380]*380position, — this must be considered in connection with that part of the petition which precedes, and which was intended by the pleader as a statement of the facts of the case. The specification of the acts of negligence must have some relation to the previous recital of the facts and circumstances attending the plaintiff at the time of the injury; and these, taken together, show clearly that the suit was brought for damages arising out of the failure of the railway company to comply with the requirements of the law in regard to public crossings, under the section just cited. This being true, the court did not err in instructing the jury that the plaintiff would not be entitled to recover in this action, unless it appeared from the evidence that the road upon which the plaintiff was traveling at the time of her injury was a public road in the meaning of the law. In the same connection, after thus making the plaintiff’s right to a recovery depend on the question as to whether or not the crossing at or near which the occurrence took place, resulting in injury to the plaintiff, was a public road, the court defined a public road as one “which had been laid out and designated by the proper county authorities as a public road or worked by the public as such.” Error is assigned upon that portion of the charge containing the definition quoted above; and we have to consider whether or not the the charge was erroneous for the reason assigned, and whether, if erroneous, the error was hurtful to the plaintiff. The question as to whether a public road might come into existence by prescription has been before this court several times; and in the case of Southern Ry. Co. v. Combs, 124 Ga. 1004 (53 S. E. 508), it was held, that, within the meaning of the law requiring certain precautionary acts to be done by railroad companies and their engineers at points where railroads crossed public roads — commonly called the blow-post law — the term “public road or highway” was not confined to one which had been laid out and established by the county authorities by regular proceedings, but included highways in any one of four ways: (1) by legislative act; (2) by formal proceedings by the county authorities establishing it; (3) by dedication; (4) by prescription. Evidence was admitted in that case to show that the road which was crossed by the railroad at the point involved was at that time and had been for many years (according to some of the witnesses, upward of 30 years) in use by the public as a road for wagons, [381]*381etc., and had been worked during that time by the county authorities as a public road. To this objection was made on the ground that such use and work would not make a public road in the meaning of the road law. What was said in the opinion must be read in the light of the case before the court and of the questions involved. It was said that continuous user for 20 years and work by the county authorities during that period showed a public road; but this was not held to be an exclusive rule as to evidence admissible to show a prescriptive highway. That certain evidence was sufficient to show prescription or authorize the jury to find it does not imply that nothing else may suffice. Indeed, in the opinion of Mr. Justice Cobb in the Combs case, he said: “It is certain that a road may become a public road when it has been used by the public and worked by the public authorities for 20 years, and it is unnecessary now to determine whether a use by the public and a working by the public authorities for a less period would make a road a public road.” We do not think that the decision in that ease should be construed as ruling that under no circumstances could a road be proved to be a public road without proof of actual work by the county authorities thereon. It is possible, for instance, that a road might be used by the public and claimed and controlled by public authorities, and clear and undoubted acts of dominion over it might be exercised, and yet the road might not need and might not have work done for its maintenance. The language of the Combs case was doubtless in the mind of the presiding judge when he used the expression “or worked by the public as such.” These words were too restrictive, as negativing any other possible mode of proving a recognition, control, or assertion of claim of dominion on the part of the county authorities. This is not a controversy with a landowner as to the acquisition of a right of way, public or private, over his land, nor as to whether public accommodation or private rights have intervened so as to prevent the withdrawal of a dedication (Civil Code, §3591). It is a question of whether there was a failure on the part of the railroad company to discharge a duty imposed by statute in regard to a place where its track crosses a public road or highway, and whether this was a public road crossing in the sense of that statute. Civil Code, §2222, et seq. The law requiring the erection of “blow-posts,” the sounding of the whistle of the locomotive, and [382]*382the eheeldng of the speed of the train, applies to public road crossings only, not to those of private ways. Georgia R. Co. v. Cox, 61 Ga. 455; Georgia R. Co. v. Partee, 107 Ga. 789 (33 S. E. 668); Hart v. Taylor, 61 Ga. 156.

The plaintiff relied on showing the existence of a public road or highway by user or prescription. Two theories have been advanced as the basis for the acquirement of a highway by prescription: one, that, after use for the necessary time and of the necessary character, it would be presumed that there had been an antecedent grant or dedication; the other, that the presumption which arises is that at some anterior period the road was established by competent authority. Indeed, there are two views as to prescription generally based 'on adverse possession alone for the necessary time, the one presuming a grant, the other interposing a bar from lapse of time. The theory of the presumption of a grant is that adopted in this State. Mitchell v. Rome, 49 Ga. 19 (15 Am. R. 669). And the doctrine of a presumption of a dedication has been applied to the acquisition of a street. Swift v. Lithonia, 101 Ga. 706 (29 S. E. 12); Georgia R. Co. v. Atlanta, 118 Ga. 486 (45 S. E. 256); 2 Dill. Mun. Corp. (4th ed.) §637 et seq. The other theory would apparently operate against minors as well as persons sui juris, since condemnation can be had and a road established against a minor as well as an adult. See Elliott on Roads and Streets (2d ed.), §§170, 171; Wash. Eas. (4th ed.) 191 (*118), 197 (*125), et seq.

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Bluebook (online)
62 S.E. 297, 131 Ga. 378, 1908 Ga. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccoy-v-central-of-georgia-railway-co-ga-1908.