Seaboard Air-Line Railway Co. v. Fountain

160 S.E. 789, 173 Ga. 593, 1931 Ga. LEXIS 361
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 15, 1931
DocketNo. 8340
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 160 S.E. 789 (Seaboard Air-Line Railway Co. v. Fountain) 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
Seaboard Air-Line Railway Co. v. Fountain, 160 S.E. 789, 173 Ga. 593, 1931 Ga. LEXIS 361 (Ga. 1931).

Opinions

Hines, J.

Fountain sued the Seaboard Air-Line Railway Company for a personal injury. In his petition he makes this case: [594]*594He was a passenger on the defendant’s train from Atlanta to Tucker. When the train was nearing Tucker an employee of the defendant announced that the next stop would be Tucker. After the train came to a complete stop he went to the door of the coach, when an employee of the railway stationed thereat an- ' nounced to him that they were at Tucker. The train was composed of several coaches, and the one in which he was riding was the last coach of the train, which stopped some distance west of the station, placing his coach several hundred yards west of the railroad station. When he stepped off of the train at the place designated by the company, and while on the right of way he was precipitated down a steep embankment and fell upon an old tin tub, and received certain injuries which are fully set out in the petition. At the time he alighted from the train it was a very dark night. There were no lights along the right of .way at the place he was told by the defendant to alight. He did not know that there was a steep embankment leading from the right of way, nor did he see it, and as he attempted to leave the right of way he fell down the embankment. The defendant failed to provide him a safe place upon which to alight from said train. At the time he was injured he was an able-bodied man, and was earning and capable of earning $2,500 per year. He has been totally disabled from performing any of his customary duties, and his disability will continue for an indefinite period of time. His earning capacity has been permanently impaired. He liad an expectancy of 32.36 years. The following acts of negligence on the part of the defendant were the proximate cause of his injuries: • .Failing to furnish him a safe place upon which to alight from the train; failing to give to him that extraordinary degree of care owing to a passenger for hire; maintaining adjacent to the right of way a steep declivity down which passengers alighting from its trains might fall; stopping the train and requiring him to alight from it upon the right of way which was not lighted on a dark night; requiring him, as a passenger for hire, to alight in the dark upon its right of way adjacent to a dangerous declivity; and negligently injuring and damaging him. He prayed judgment for $15,000.

The defendant demurred upon the ground that the petition set forth no cause of action; and demurred specially upon ten grounds. The court overruled the demurrers, The defendant ex-[595]*595eepted pendente lite, and assigns error on the rulings so excepted to. In its answer the defendant denied all the acts of negligence charged, and denied that it injured the plaintiff. It averred that the plaintiff was carried to his destination, and alighted in safety; and that if the plaintiff received any injury thereafter, it was due to his own negligence. The trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff for $1,000. The defendant moved for a new trial upon the general grounds, and upon three special grounds to which reference will be hereinafter made. The judge overruled the motion for new trial;.and the defendant excepted.

The petition, the material portions of which appear above, sets out a cause of action; and the trial judge did not err in overruling the general ground of the demurrer. Counsel for the railway company base the contrary contention upon the proposition that “if the grounds of the special demurrer had been sustained by the court, then the ground of the general demurrer was good and should have been sustained.” The converse of this proposition is true; that is, if the special grounds of the demurrer are’not good, the general ground is bad. We shall attempt to show that the special grounds of demurrer are without merit. So we are of the opinion that the trial judge did not err in overruling the general 'demurrer.

Are the special grounds of demurrer good? We deal only with the grounds upon which counsel for the railway insist in their brief. The first ground is directed against a portion of a sentence in the 11th' paragraph of the petition, as follows: “and the defendant failed to furnish him as such passenger a safe place upon which to aliglit from said train.” The grounds of attack are, that this averment is too indefinite and uncertain, that it fails to put the defendant upon notice in which respect it failed to furnish plaintiff a safe place to alight from the train, that it fails to set out in what manner the place upon which he alighted was unsafe, that it is a mere conclusion unsupported by other allegations in this paragraph, and that it is in conflict with other averments in the petition that plaintiff alighted from the train in safety. Practically the same averment is made in paragraph 18 of the • petition; and the defendant demurs to it upon the same grounds. The defendant specially demurred to the averments in paragraph 18, that the defendant was negligent, “in maintaining [596]*596adjacent to its right of way a steep declivity down which passengers alighting from its train may fall; in stopping its train and requiring your petitioner as a passenger for hire to alight from its train upon its right of way which was not lighted upon a dark night; in stopping its train several hundred yards away from the railroad station; and in negligently injuring and damaging your petitioner,” on the grounds that they are all general, and do not specifically set forth wherein and how the company was negligent, the angle of the declivity, how far removed from the railway tracks, the distance between the declivity and the right of way, the height or depth of the declivity, and the general condition of the road-bed at the point where the petitioner alighted. Taken apart from other allegations of the petition, some of these averments might seem to be subject to the criticisms of the special demurrer; but viewed in the light of the petition as a whole, they are without merit. The others are not subject to the criticisms urged against them. So we are of the opinion that the trial judge did not err in overruling them.

The judge gave in charge to the jury this instruction: “And in this connection I will charge you this, that in all cases against railroad companies for damages done to persons or property, proof of injury inflicted by the running of locomotives or cars of such companies shall be prima facie evidence of the lack of reasonable skill and care on the part of the company. But this, of course, is subject to rebuttal. If the railroad company shows to your satisfaction that they did exercise the care required by the law to be exercised, that they were not guilty of such negligence, then of course that presumption, if there be such (prima facie I should have said instead of presumption, and I withdraw the presumption), would be rebutted.” One of the errors assigned on this instruction is that it is not supported by the pleadings, the evidence or the law. This instruction is based upon the act of August 24, 192-9, which provides “that in all actions against railroad companies for damages done to persons or property, proof of injury inflicted by the running of locomotives or cars of such company shall be prima facie evidence of the want of reasonable skill and care on the part of the servants of the company in reference to such injury.” Ga. Laws 1929, p. 315. Under this statute proof of an injury is prima facie evidence of the want of reasonable skill [597]*597and care on tbe part of tbe servants of tbe railroad company only in case where such injury is inflicted by the running of a locomotive or cars of such company.

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160 S.E. 789, 173 Ga. 593, 1931 Ga. LEXIS 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seaboard-air-line-railway-co-v-fountain-ga-1931.