Morgan v. Lamb

85 S.E. 792, 16 Ga. App. 484, 1915 Ga. App. LEXIS 98
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 25, 1915
Docket6217
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 85 S.E. 792 (Morgan v. Lamb) 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
Morgan v. Lamb, 85 S.E. 792, 16 Ga. App. 484, 1915 Ga. App. LEXIS 98 (Ga. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinions

Wade, J.

This was an action by a father for the homicide of his son. The son was a negro boy, 16 years of age at the time of his death. The sole witness in behalf of the plaintiff as to the manner in which the deceased met his death was James B. McCrary, who testified, that he himself was on a train of the defendant railway company going from Waycross to Bolen station, and that between Haywood (another station) and Bolen, he saw the deceased come into the negro coach and approach the “news butch,” who sold newspapers, candy, and various other things on the train, and stand there talking for a time, but did not see him purchase any merchandise, though he had some money in his hand at the time; that the conductor and the porter started to enter the white coach, but seeing the deceased, Ira Morgan, they turned in haste, and one of them caught the boy by his shirt-sleeves and shoved him out of the door; that the conductor, whose name was Morris, and the porter, Ernest Montgomery, caught the boy by the sleeves immediately after entering the colored coach, and went out of the front door of the coach “and shoved him off and came back into the colored coach,” and the conductor said, “That damn negro don’t mind hitting the cross-ties,” and the porter laughed; that he saw the porter catch the deceased by the “neck of his collar and shove him off;” that he (the witness) got up on the side of the seat he was sitting on and leaned through the window and could just get a glimpse of the porter’s hand, and saw the boy going off just as'he fell from the train; that the train was running pretty fast, and that when the deceased fell from it he burst his head open; that this happened about three quarters of a mile from Haywood station, and the witness was sitting at the time on a seat with a man named Ben Smith, — the witness on the left side next to the passage between the seats, and Ben next to the window. On cross-examination this witness was interrogated as to his testimony at the coroner’s inquest, and he admitted that he did not then tell all he was now telling, though he said the oath had been administered to him from a certain book, and it later appeared that the oath so administered was to tell “the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.” He explained that he had been advised by a girl with whom he was “going,” as well as by other apparent friends of his, that the less he had to say about the matter the better it would be for him, and therefore he “told only a little to the cor[486]*486oner and his jury” when sworn as a witness there, and “held back the balance of [his] testimony,” though he said that if not mistaken, he had answered all the questions asked him at the inquest. There was testimony from the father of the deceased that he saw his son’s dead body, and found the head “broken in and his brains knocked out;” that Haywood station, where it appears the boy entered the train, was a flag-station only, and no tickets were sold there; that when he reached the body of his son there were two nickels lying by the body, which would have been sufficient to pay for a ticket from Haywood to Bolen, but he did not know what money the boy had, as he was not there and had not seen his son in a week, and he knew nothing about the occurrence; that the boy earned $1.50 per day and helped to support him and his family; that he boarded his son free of charge, and bought the boy’s clothes, as he received all of his son’s wages.

The coroner who held the inquest testified, that the body of the deceased was found lying with the head about one or two feet from the end of the railroad cross-ties, and with the feet towards the ditch, and the head was bruised badly on the side of the forehead and broken in, and he saw signs indicating where the head hit the end of the ties near which the body was lying; that a can of “Prince Albert tobacco,” a package of baking-powders, a cap^ 10 cents in cash, a handkerchief, and a pocket-knife, were found with the body; that he assumed that the death had been brought about by a fall from the train, for the reason that the body was found by the railroad-track and no other cause was known; that at the inquest the witness McCrary testified that Ira Morgan got aboard the train and “went to the news butch and seemed to buy something; then, after the train started and left Haywood for some distance, walked to the platform like he was going to get off; the conductor and porter were behind him;” that when the conductor and porter came back again through the car, he heard them say, “That negro must not mind getting off a train;” that he was familiar with the construction of railroad-coaches, and it was impossible to look through an A., B. & A. passenger-car window and see what was going on on the steps of the coach in front of him; that he had noticed a little strip of iron just outside of the coach windows about three or four inches wide, and that if a man sitting inside the coach went to look out of a window, he would have to [487]*487put his head far enough out to look around the strip- of iron to see what was going on in front of him, and it was only possible to raise the A., B. & A. windows half way; that when McCrary was questioned before the coroner’s jury and asked specifically if he knew anything more about the matter, he said he did not; that this was all he knew about it. The conductor, J. S. Morris, testified that he knew absolutely nothing about any negro who was ejected from the front end of the -second-class coach by his porter Montgomery between Haywood and Bolen on Saturday night, July 26, 1914, the time the homicide occurred; that no one, so far as his knowledge extended, got oil the train between those two points, and there was no truth in the allegation that he and his porter forcibly, maliciously, and in violation of the rights of Ira Morgan, ejected and threw him from the passenger-train at a point about a quarter of a mile above Haywood station, when the train was running at the high rate of 20 miles per hour; that he was conductor in charge of that particular train, and did not remember seeing such a negro as the deceased on the train that night at all; that a person looking out of a window in one of the coaches on this train and around the window-shields,' projecting from the side of the windows to keep cinders out* “would have to get his head out a pretty good ways to see around” the shields, and he did not think a person could see what was happening on the steps of the car in front of him, unless he got his head and shoulders out of the window; he did not believe he could see in front at all; that a person so situated could not see what was happening on the platform of the coach; that a man sitting inside the coach could not see what was happening on the platform of the car; that one passenger, a Mr. Robinson, got on at Haywood and went into the second-class car, and that he himself stood in the aisle of the car all the way from Haywood to Bolen, talking to Robinson; that he did not know why Robinson went into the negro coach, as he did not ask Robinson, but Robinson had a sack with him and was in his shirt-sleeves, and there were no negroes in that part of the car where he and Robinson were talking, though there were five or six in the'Other end of the car; that he did not sit down in the negro ear, or in the end where the negroes were, and there was a partition between the place where he and Robinson were and the main body of the car.

Ernest Montgomery, the porter, testified, that he did not remem[488]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 S.E. 792, 16 Ga. App. 484, 1915 Ga. App. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-v-lamb-gactapp-1915.