Southern Railway Co. v. Brackett

73 Ga. App. 648
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 15, 1946
Docket31079
StatusPublished

This text of 73 Ga. App. 648 (Southern Railway Co. v. Brackett) 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. Brackett, 73 Ga. App. 648 (Ga. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinions

MacIntyre, J.

1. The movant specifies as erroneous the following charge — “I charge you, gentlemen, in that connection, if you find that Pease was not the operator of the train, yet he owed to the plaintiff due care, such as an ordinary prudent person would have exercised under similar circumstances when he discovered her peril, if he did discover her peril, and as to whether or not he exercised due care for the safety of the plaintiff in this case, is purely a question for your determination, and you will be governed in deciding that question, gentlemen, by determining what an ordinarily prudent person would have done for the protection of the plaintiff under the same or similar circumstances” — on the grounds that: “(a) said instruction was unsupported by the evidence; (b) it was confusing to the jury; (c) it was misleading to the jury; (d) it authorized the jury to predicate its verdict against movant upon the conduct of movant’s station agent, who at such time and place breached no duty owing to the plaintiff; (e) it submitted to the jury an issue not raised by the evidence; (f) it authorized a recovery for failure to direct and employ a signalling device not designed for use in protecting crossings and the use of which was for train orders only.”

If the defendant wished an elaboration on the charge, it should have requested it. The exercise of due care is required of a railroad company acting through its employees and agents to avoid injuring a person crossing the tracks of such company at a public crossing; and it is likewise the duty of the person crossing a railroad track at a public crossing to use ordinary care to avoid injury. The fact that' it was the duty of Pease, the employee and agent of the railroad company, to operate the semaphore which was installed to signal train orders, etc., does not signify that Pease, the employee and agent of the railroad company, could allow a train to injure a person crossing the tracks at a public crossing, if he could, as the agent of the company, have avoided it by the use of due care in the use of the semaphore or any other available means, even though it was not his specific duty to use the semaphore to avoid injuries to persons crossing the tracks at the public crossing in question. 3 Blashfield’s Cyclopedia of Automobile Law and Practice, 333 (30).

• The defendant relies very strongly upon the cases of Central of Georgia Railway Company v. Griffin, 35 Ga. App. 161 (132 S. E. [655]*655255); and Huckabee v. Grace, 48 Ga. App. 621 (173 S. E. 744). The Griffin case was based upon a statutory duty, and it was there held that, if the injured person was not one upon whom the duty prescribed' by the statute could operate, of course no statute had been violated. And in the Huckabee case this court quoted with approval the following: “‘To constitute an act of omission the foundation of an action of law, it must appear that a duty was due by the actor to the person claiming to have been injured by the act. The rule of reasonable care necessarily includes two persons or one person and some right or property of another. It is a rule of relation. If there is no relation, there is nothing upon which the rule can operate. The rule of reasonable care under the circumstances could not limit the conduct of Eobinson Crusoe as he was first situated. But as soon as he saw the tracks in the sand, the rule began to have vitality. He then had notice that there might be other persons on the island, and this knowledge of their presence made it his duty as a reasonable man to use reasonable care to the end that no act of his should injure them. Unless and until one is brought into relation with other men, or property, or rights, he has no obligation to act with reference to them, and this is true whether the obligation be called legal, moral, or reasonable.5 55 And so in this case, if Pease had been in the depot and operated the semaphore from his 'office, and had not seen the plaintiff approaching the railroad tracks under the circumstances stated, and had operated the semaphore without reference to the plaintifE crossing the railroad tracks at a frequently used public crossing, the rule of reasonable or ordinary care could not have limited the conduct of Pease as he was then situated, just as “the rule of reasonable care under the circumstances could not limit the conduct of Eobinson Crusoe as he was first situated.55 The plaintiff does not contend that Pease should keep a regular or permanent watchout for persons crossing at the public crossing in question.

In the operation of the semaphore, Pease’s duty was not general in the sense that he owed a duty to everybody who passed over the public crossing to slow up or stop the train in order to let them pass or to avoid a collision. But in the instant ease the jury could have found that Pease did not owe the plaintiff any dnty under any statute or any specific rule of the railroad com[656]*656pany which related to the operation of the semaphore or that he did not owe the plaintiff any duty under any specific rule of the railroad company; but that he did, as an employee of the railroad company, under the general principle of the common law, owe her a duty, by reason of her peculiar position under the stated circumstances, not to stand by and fail to use the available means which if used in the exercise of due care would have prevented the injury. Of course a railroad company can act only through its agents. In Pollard v. Weeks, 60 Ga. App. 664, 672 (4 S. E. 2d, 722), cited by the defendant in its motion for a rehearing, it is stated that “whether or not an emergency exists, is a question for the jury;” and here the jury have passed on this question adversely to the defendant.

With reference to the proposition that Pease warned or attempted to warn the plaintiff at the crossing, that- the plaintiff had failed to heed the warning, and that this failure was itself the cause and convicted the plaintiff of contributory negligence— it is sufficient to say that the undisputed proof by Pease himself is that the defendant in error, as she started over the crossing, did not hear him or did not appear to see the signals which he was making to try and convey to her the approach of the oncoming train. Thus this proposition cannot be sustained. Baker v. Hodges (Tex. Civ. App.) 231 S. W. 844. Under his charge, the judge left it to the jury to say whether it was negligence of the agents of the railroad company to use the means at hand in an effort to avoid injuring the plaintiff on a frequently used railroad crossing. We do not think that the judge committed reversible error for the reasons urged. Baker v. Hodges, supra; 3 Blashfield’s Cyc., 84, 85, § 1710.

2. “ ‘A jury in arriving at a conclusion upon disputed issues of fact may believe a part of the testimony of a witness or witnesses, and reject another part thereof, it being their duty to as-' certain'the truth of the case from the opinion they entertain of all the evidence submitted for their consideration.’ ” Reaves v. Columbus Electric &c. Co., 32 Ga. App. 140, 151 (122 S. E. 824). Relative to the contention that the contributory negligence of the plaintiff was the cause of the injury — taking that view of the evidence most favorable to upholding the verdict, for every presumption and every inference is in its favor, the jury were authorized [657]

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Related

Baker v. Hodges
231 S.W. 844 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1921)
Thomas v. Central of Georgia Railway Co.
48 S.E. 683 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1904)
Southern Railway Co. v. Jay
72 S.E. 503 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1911)
Reaves v. Columbus Electric & Power Co.
122 S.E. 824 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1924)
Central of Georgia Railway Co. v. Griffin
132 S.E. 255 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1926)
Southern Railway Co. v. Slaton
154 S.E. 718 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1930)
Huckabee v. Grace
173 S.E. 744 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1934)
Kirk v. Savannah Electric & Power Co.
178 S.E. 470 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1935)
Richardson v. Pollard
196 S.E. 199 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1938)
Pollard v. Weeks
4 S.E.2d 722 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1939)
Beckworth v. State
4 S.E.2d 707 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1939)

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Bluebook (online)
73 Ga. App. 648, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-railway-co-v-brackett-gactapp-1946.