Mitchell County v. Dixon

92 S.E. 405, 20 Ga. App. 21, 1917 Ga. App. LEXIS 693
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 3, 1917
Docket8199, 8200
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 92 S.E. 405 (Mitchell County v. Dixon) 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
Mitchell County v. Dixon, 92 S.E. 405, 20 Ga. App. 21, 1917 Ga. App. LEXIS 693 (Ga. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

.George, J.

W. C. Dixon filed a suit against Mitchell County, in two counts. The first count, which the court below held good as against the county’s demurrer, alleged, in substance, that the plaintiff, on September -9, 1912, in the daytime, was driving in his buggy southward along a public road of Mitchell County, at a place where the public road crossed a stream, and where the county maintained a bridge over the stream; that the bridge was built since the year 1888, and that it consisted of a wooden structure about twenty feet long, measured along the said road, and earthen abutments for the same, extending from said wooden part northward and southward along said road; that while plaintiff was thus driving along on said abutment, the same being a part of the bridge, his buggy fell suddenly into a large hole about four feet wide, about four feet long, and three feet deep, which was about fifteen or twenty feet south of the wooden part of the bridge, and about twenty feet west of the central and most elevated part of said abutment; that by reason thereof plaintiff was thrown from his buggy and his buggy was overturned, and plaintiff was severely injured; that said defect in said abutment was known to the county commissioners and was not known to plaintiff, and that plaintiff, ■in February after said injury, orally presented his claim for his said injuries to said county commissioners in lawful meeting assembled, and said county commissioners then and there accepted such presentation of said claim and acted upon it, and promised ■ plaintiff that they would investigate said claim and advise him whether it would be paid, and that they did investigate and refused to pay it, and that, by reason of the foregoing facts, said county , commissioners waived presentation of said claim in writing and .estopped the county from setting up the defense that said claim had not been presented in writing. Plaintiff in said first count alleged.also that he had brought suit against the county within twelve months, and that service had been duly acknowledged by [23]*23the county on said suit within twelve months after the injury complained of, and that said suit was pending until July 5, 1915, when the same was withdrawn by plaintiff, and that the present suit was brought in renewal thereof, and within six months after the withdrawal and after the payment of all costs. A copy of the original suit was attached to the present suit and made a part of both counts of the petition. In an amendment to the first count of the petition the plaintiff alleged, that at the time of his injury his eyesight was somewhat defective; that-it was sufficiently good to enable him to travel by buggy in perfect safety on roads and bridges which were maintained with reasonable care and diligence, and that at the time of his injury the road overseer and other agents of said county were operating a large force of convicts and mules and scrapes on said bridge and abutment, and said convicts and mules and vehicles were being driven at hard labor and in rapid motion around and about the defect in said bridge and its abutment, largely concealing said defect from plaintiff, and that the newly piled up earth and newly made holes and the colors of the same were such as to make it impossible for plaintiff, as affairs there existed, to discover said defect, and for these reasons the plaintiff did not know of said defect, and could not, by the exercise of ordinary diligence, have discovered the same in time to avoid the injury.

The second count of the petition, which was stricken by the court upon demurrer, contained substantially the same allegations of fact set out in the first count, except tfiat the hole, into which' plaintiff’s buggy suddenly fell was alleged to be outside of the abutment and in the ground a few feet west of the west side of the said abutment, but it was averred that even though said hole were outside of the abutment, the county would be liable to him for his injury, by reason of certain facts set out in that count, in substance as follows: That said bridge over which plaintiff was passing at the time he was injured consisted of a wooden structure about twenty feet long, measured along said road, and about twelve feet wide, measured across said road, and about five feet above the general level of the ground on each side of said bridge. (The stream over which said bridge extended was what is known as a South Georgia “slough,” that is, a stream carrying a large body of water at certain seasons of the year, but having for the most of its length [24]*24practically no banks, but extending, on the contrary, in a broad, shallow, slowly moving sheet of water, and flowing through the low places of the very flat level country found often in the “wiregrass section” of Georgia.) There was an earthen abutment about fifteen feet wide across said road, extending from said wooden part of said bridge northward and southward along said road for a distance of seventy-five or one hundred feet from said wooden part of the bridge, said abutment being of the same height as said bridge,' where the same joins said bridge, to wit, about five feet above the general level of the ground on each side of said road, and 'the height of said abutment became gradually less as the distance from said wooden part of said bridge increased, until said abutment came to the level of the surrounding country and merged into the road; that for more than three years prior to plaintiff’s injury said county had maintained said bridge and abutment as above described, and had also maintained, at a point about ten feet south of the wooden structure of said bridge, a wood apron, or short bridge, consisting of planks laid side by side upon sills, said apron extending laterally from the top of said abutment downward and westward across a drain ditch, which ran along the western side of said abutment at that point to the beginning of a settlement road or private way, which private road branched off from said public road and its bridge at that point, which settlement road extended westward to plaintiff’s farm; that plaintiff had been using said bridge and abutment and said apron and said settlement road as a means of approaching lus farm during the said three years; that on the day when he was injured the county authorities were working the county convicts and road hands at that point, and had, unknown to plaintiff, piled up a lot of fresh earth on said abutment, so that the level thereof at the point where said “apron” extended from it into said “settlement” road was about one foot higher than it had been previously, so that there was a sharp drop-down, or decline, from the top of said abutment to said “apron,” so that a buggy turning off from said abutment at its new level, and going on to said apron, would acquire a- dangerous speed, by reason of said drop-down; that at the same time said county authorities had also dug a large hole, about four feet wide and four feet long and three feet deep, in the ground to the westward of said “apron,” said hole extending about eighteen inches into the beaten track of said “settlement” road, so that a buggy which turned off from said [25]*25public road and bridge and ran down said “apron” would run into said hole; that plaintiff, driving as he had been accustomed to do, did turn his buggy froni the top of said abutment, at its said new level, on to said “apron,” and, in trying to drive along said “apron” and said. settlement road extending to the westward, plaintiff’s buggy, by reason of the sharp decline from the new level of said abutment down to said “apron,” ran rapidly down said “apron” and into said hole, whereby plaintiff was thrown out of said buggy and injured as set forth in the petition.

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Bluebook (online)
92 S.E. 405, 20 Ga. App. 21, 1917 Ga. App. LEXIS 693, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-county-v-dixon-gactapp-1917.