Raleigh & Gaston Railroad v. Allen

32 S.E. 622, 106 Ga. 572, 1899 Ga. LEXIS 728
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 4, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 32 S.E. 622 (Raleigh & Gaston Railroad v. Allen) 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
Raleigh & Gaston Railroad v. Allen, 32 S.E. 622, 106 Ga. 572, 1899 Ga. LEXIS 728 (Ga. 1899).

Opinion

Lewis, J.

A. G. Allen brought suit for damages against the Raleigh & Gaston and Seaboard & Roanoke Railroad Companies, alleging substantially as follows: In February, 1896, plaintiff was a car-coupler, engaged in the service of the defendants. While engaged in the act of coupling two of defendants’. cars, he had set the pin against the deadwood, but the pin would not drop in when the cars went together, and he thereupon gave the engineer the stop signal, which meant that he should remain still until he got further notice. Plaintiff went in to put the pin down and adjust it, and at that time the cars were standing perfectly still, and it was impossible to adjust the pin without putting it down with the hand. As plaintiff took hold of the head of the pin, the cars, which had been standing still, were suddenly and negligently, and without any signal from the plaintiff, moved back against him by the engineer in charge of the train, and plaintiff’s hand was mashed, the injuries to which he particularly sets forth in his declaration. The petition was amended by the further allegation that the engine was negligently moved off from the cars to which it was to be coupled, without any signal, and this pulled the pin back against the body of the car, mashing plaintiff's hand. The defendants in their plea denied liability, and alleged that the plaintiff was injured by his own negligence in not using a stick, and that the injury was the result of this negligence, and the natural slack due to the proper operation of the train. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff for the sum of $550; whereupon the defendants [574]*574moved for a new trial, and they assign error upon the judgment of the court overruling their motion.

1. One ground of the motion for a new trial is, that the court erred in charging the jury as follows: “Now the defendants contend that the plaintiff in this action admitted that the alleged occurrence happened in a certain way, and not as charged in plaintiff’s declaration. Well, admissions, gentlemen of the jury, the law says, should be scanned with care by the jury. What weight they shall have, if any admissions are shown, and whether they are or are not is a question for the jury, but where they are shown it is the duty of the jury to scan them with care and give them just such weight as they think they are entitled to, like all other evidence in the case.” The error assigned on this charge is, that the court only charged one side of a correct legal proposition, and when he cautioned the jury they should scan such admissions with care, he should also have charged that when said admissions were established to their satisfaction, they constituted a high degree of evidence and should be entitled to great weight before the jury. The ruling of the court that all admissions should be scanned with care is authorized by section 5197 of the Civil Code. But there is nothing in the provisions of this section of the code, nor in any other statute of the State, which declares that when an admission is established to the satisfaction of the jury it constitutes a high degree of evidence and the jury should give it great weight. It may be sound philosophy, founded upon human experience and a knowledge of human character, that an admission, made voluntarily by a party against his own interest, constitutes very strong evidence of the fact admitted. It is often the case that learned writers of law-books, and even courts, in the discussion of principles involving the weight of testimony and the credibility of witnesses, advance ideas, sound in themselves, which are not intended to be declared as positive law, but as a safe rule to guide mankind generally in reaching conclusions upon stated facts; but it does not follow from this that, however sound the philosophy of such rules may be, a court should adopt, them as positive law, apply them to a particular case, and give them as [575]*575rules by which' the jury should be governed in their deliberations. In several of the States the judge is permitted to give to the jury the opinion he entertains of the evidence and his reasons therefor. In this State, however, any intimation of an opinion by the court to the jury as to what fact has or has not been shown in a case is reversible error. The weight of testiinony and the credibility of a witness are peculiarly and exclusively, under the law of Georgia, questions for the jury; and unless the statute expressly specifies how certain testimony should be received, what weight should be given it, whether it should be scrutinized with caution or care, it is, to say the least, a safer plan always for the judge to express no opinion upon the subject but to leave the matter entirely with the jury. In some instances, no doubt, the admissions of a party against his interest are entitled to great weight; but what weight should be given them would depend, largely upon the circumstances under which they were made. As to the effect of such circumstances upon the weight of the testimony, the jury alone should judge.

2. Another ground of the motion for a new trial is, that the court erred in the following charge to the jury: “ Now if it is affirmatively shown to the jury by the plaintiff (an employee) that he was without fault, then the law would raise the presumption that the defendants were at fault, that the defendants were negligent; but this presumption would not arise until the plaintiff shows affirmatively that he was without fault himself. If he does so, the presumption would arise against the defendant companies, and the burden would be on the defendants to show, either that they were not negligent as charged, or that the plaintiff was at fault, or that the plaintiff could by the exercise of ordinary care on his part have avoided the consequences to. himself of the defendants’ negligence, if that is shown.” There is no contention that, as an abstract proposition of law, the above quotation from the judge’s charge is not correct; but it is insisted that the error consists in the fact that it did not present to the jury the alternative of the injury being occasioned by a mere accident or casualty; that a part of the defense being that the injury was occasioned by the slack [576]*576or settling down of the train after the engine had stopped, the defendants were entitled to a charge, in this connection, which would relieve them from liability if the injury was the result of the accident. The complaint is not that the court altogether failed to charge upon the theory of an accident, but that it was not given in the particular connection where he was instructing the jury upon the subject of the burden of proof. We can see no merit in this ground. The court can not well charge the law upon every theory of the case authorized by the testimony and the pleadingsin the same breath or in the same connection.

3. Error is further assigned in the motion, on account of the following charge of the court: “ Now the defendants contend specifically, gentlemen of the jury, that Mr. Allen, the plaintiff, was at fault in that he was in the violation of certain rules which required the use of a stick in making couplings, which they alleged existed. Well, gentlemen of the jury, your first inquiry as to that would be whether the evidence showed you there was such a rule, whether it was a reasonable and proper rule.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 S.E. 622, 106 Ga. 572, 1899 Ga. LEXIS 728, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raleigh-gaston-railroad-v-allen-ga-1899.