Southern Railway Co. v. Bartlett

162 S.E. 831, 44 Ga. App. 710, 1932 Ga. App. LEXIS 465
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 16, 1932
Docket21460
StatusPublished

This text of 162 S.E. 831 (Southern Railway Co. v. Bartlett) 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
Southern Railway Co. v. Bartlett, 162 S.E. 831, 44 Ga. App. 710, 1932 Ga. App. LEXIS 465 (Ga. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

Luke, J.

Mrs. Nannie Lou Bartlett brought an action against the Southern Railway Company and engineer J. M. Cox to recover damages for personal injuries. The jury found for Cox, but against the railway company for $1,000. The exception is to the judgment overruling the'company’s motion for a new trial.

Omitting the formal allegations, and those unnecessary for a determination of the questions presented for decision, the petition is substantially as follows: On May 31, 1930, the plaintiff purchased a ticket entitling her to safe passage over the defendant’s railroad from Atlanta, Ga., to the passenger-station of said company at Villa Rica, Ga. When said train ““reached a point just east of Villa Rica, Ga., at about seven o’clock, p. m., a member of the train crew in charge of said train . . called the station “Villa Rica,’ indicating to petitioner that said train had reached the point of her destination.” Petitioner was not ““familiar with the railroad-yards, stations, landings, and sidetracks, and was led to believe that said train had reached the proper landing place at the regular stopping point at the passengel-station of Villa Rica.” ““At said time and place other passengers began getting off of said train, and petitioner followed them out of said ear on the front platform of said car where the flagman . . was assisting said passengers in getting off. At said time and place there were passengers ahead of petitioner, which obstructed petitioner’s view [712]*712of the landing place.” When petitioner reached the bottom step of said coach and was in the act of stepping to the ground, she discovered that there was no passenger-landing there, and that the train “had stopped on the sidetrack before reaching said passenger-station and said proper landing place.” The distance “from said step to the ground between said sidetracks was about four feet,” and, realizing “that said distance was too great for her to make the step off in safety, . . she attempted to stop, and in attempting to brace herself on the said bottom step of said coach,” the heel of her right shoe caught on the said step, tearing the heel off of said shoe, which, together with' petitioner’s airead}'' unbalanced condition in attempting to stop to prevent falling when she discovered the great distance from said step to the ground, caused petitioner to be “violently thrown against the handrail of said coach, and from there to tlie ground between said sidetracks.” “When petitioner was thrown from said step as aforesaid, her left hand and wrist struck the iron rail of said coach,” and the bones, nerves, and ligaments thereof, were seriously injured; and “her left ankle struck the ground with such great force” that it was injured in stated ways. Petitioner was twenty-nine years old and had an expectancy of thirty-five years. Defendants were negligent in the following particulars: (a) “in stopping said train . . where there was no place for passengers to land safely;” (5) “in announcing ‘Villa Rica’ as the next stop and then stopping said train in said sidetrack and having petitioner attempt to alight therefrom;” (c) in not having said train “at the regular place for discharging passengers;” (d) “in failing to provide a safe place for petitioner to alight from said train;” (0) “in failing to provide a suitable step-box or other means for petitioner to safely alight from said train;” (/) “in failing to take petitioner to her destination and to the regular place of discharging passengers at the regular passenger-station;” (g) “in failing to notify petitioner that said train had stopped in said sidetrack, and not at the regular passenger-station, after it had been announced that Villa Rica was the next stop;” (h) “in failing to safely transport petitioner from Atlanta, Georgia, to Villa Rica passenger-station, as said company had agreed to do.”

The answer admitted that-the petitioner had purchased said ticket and boarded said train, and had attempted to leave the train at said [713]*713sidetrack; averred that “if plaintiff sustained any injuries, . . the same was the result of her own . . negligence, and that she could have avoided the same by the exercise of ordinary care for her own safety,” and, in effect, denied the other material allegations of the petition.

We quote from the testimony of the plaintiff as follows: “The train stopped on a switch-track. . . It was a good block or more from the station. I didn’t know whether I was at the station or not. I got off there. It was either the conductor or flagman that called Villa Eica. . . It was a member of the train crew. . . He called Villa Eica twice. . . It was slowing, beginning to stop. All the passengers that were for Villa Eica got off there. All got off in front of me except three, . . all these other passengers were out on the platform ahead of me. . . The flagman was down on the ground helping these passengers to alight. . . That was somewhere near seven o’clock in the afternoon. The grounds were not lighted up; it was dark. . . They called the stop, . . and I was following the other passengers out, . . and I was at the bottom step and ready to make my step down, and I saw it was a long step, and I knew it would throw me, taking it unexpected, and I tried to brace myself; and when I did that my shoe-heel hung, and of course I realized that I was falling, and I tried to catch, and threw my hand back and hit the rail in trying to catch, and went down on the ground. I would have fallen if the flagman had not caught me. He caught me, but it almost threw me; he broke the fall. From the bottom step to the ground it was three or four feet. There wasn’t any landing there at all on the ground for passengers to land — not anything except just the ground. The ground Was not up level with the tracks like it is at the landing place. . . They did not give me any information about not being at the proper landing at Villa Eica Station. They had not said one word about it not being the place to get off. I never had gotten off at that place before. I thought I was at the station where it was fixed for me to get off. . . The heel got caught against those pieces that are raised up on the step. . . The heel got caught against those pieces that are raised, . . those little depressions a fraction of an inch deep, to keep it from getting slick. . .”

The defendant introduced evidence to the effect that “Villa Eica” [714]*714was not called before the train in question stopped at said siding to let another train pass; that said lower step of said car-platform was about eighteen or twenty inches from the ground, but the ground was smooth; that it was not dark and the plaintiff knew, or should have known, that she was not at the regular station at Villa Rica; that a member of the train crew told the plaintiff that the train had not reached said station, and the plaintiff said she would get off any way; and that the plaintiff was not injured as alleged. In material respects the evidence presented by the defendant was in sharp conflict with that adduced by the plaintiff. However, since it is exclusively the province of the jury to pass upon the credibility of witnesses, the weight of the evidence, and questions of diligence and negligence, this court can not say that the verdict was not warranted by the evidence. We hold that the trial judge did not err in overruling the general grounds of the motion for a new trial.

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Bluebook (online)
162 S.E. 831, 44 Ga. App. 710, 1932 Ga. App. LEXIS 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-railway-co-v-bartlett-gactapp-1932.