Southern Railway Co. v. Sewell

90 S.E. 94, 18 Ga. App. 544, 1916 Ga. App. LEXIS 1109
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 21, 1916
Docket6938; 6939
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 90 S.E. 94 (Southern Railway Co. v. Sewell) 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. Sewell, 90 S.E. 94, 18 Ga. App. 544, 1916 Ga. App. LEXIS 1109 (Ga. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Wade, C. J.

Through his next friend, Horace Á. Sewell, a minor, brought a joint suit for personal injuries against the Southern Eailway Company, a common carrier, domiciled without the State of Georgia, but running trains therein through the county of Carroll, where it had an agent and maintained an agency and place of business, and against Malcolm G. Waitt, a conductor of said railway company, in charge of - the passenger-train, from ■ which the plaintiff fell and was injuyed on January 14, 1914. The plaintiff alleged, in brief, that on the day named he went to a station- on the line of said railway company at Eruithurst, Alabama, for the purpose of boarding a passenger-train of said company, funning from Atlanta, Georgia, by said station, to Anniston, Alabama; that, being informed by the agent of the company that no tickets were sold for this particular train at this station, as it was a flag station only, but that he might become a passenger and pay his fare on the train without additional charge because of his failure to secure a ticket, he 'remained there until the train approached the station and stopped to discharge and receive passengers ; that he approached the 'train from the side where he had previously boarded trains at this station, but, finding the vestibule doors closed on that side, he immediately ran around the rear of the train, in the effort to reach-the door open on that side before the train commenced to move, but before he reached the steps and entered the train it started off, and, in his anxiety to continue his journey, he seized the hand-hold, placed on each side of the steps to enable passengers to enter the car, and undertook thus to board the moving train; that when too late to safely relinquish his hold and alight on the ground, he discovered that the vestibule doors, where he was endeavoring to enter, were fast closed, and he hung on in desperation, until ultimately, from cold and fatigue, some minutes thereafter, his grip relaxed and he fell to the grottnd while the train was in rapid motion and was seriously injured; that while he was hanging to the vestibule doors a number of passengers on the train, including one Will Gentry, notified the porter, the flagman, the ticket collector, the special conductor in charge of the rear coach of the train (who were unknown to the plaintiff by name or otherwise), afld the said Malcolm G. Waitt, the conductor of the train, whose duty it was to control the running and operating of the train, of the dangerous position in which [546]*546the plaintiff was placed; that certain servants of the defendant came and looked at him through 'the glass door of the vestibule, still hanging to the side of the vestibule, and each in turn notified the conductor of his perilous situation, but, notwithstanding his and their demand that the door be opened, the conductor refused to open it, and permitted the plaintiff to remain hanging in this dangerous position until ultimately he fell off as aforesaid; that both the railway company and the conductor were negligent, in that, having full knowledge of the danger to which he was exposed in consequence of his attempt to enter the train in the manner and by the means aforesaid, with ample opportunity to stop the train or to admit him into the vestibule of the car he was seeking to enter, before his strength became exhausted and before he fell as aforesaid, they chose nevertheless to refuse to relieve him in either manner or to give orders so that he might be relieved; that the casualty occurred in winter, during bitterly cold weather, but, notwithstanding this fact and notwithstanding the knowledge of the defendants of his perilous situation after he had fallen from the train, they piermitted -him to lie there for three hours or more, helpless and exposed to the cold. The petition alleged that the-defendants were liable to the plaintiff in consequence of their joint and concurrent negligence as set forth therein, and set out the nature and character of his injuries, his earning capacity, etc., and prayed for damages in the sum of $100,000.

The petition was demurred to generally by the Southern Railway Company; and a special demurrer, on the ground that an allegation therein as to the 'expense incurred for medical treatment, etc., was not sufficiently definite and full, was likewise filed. The plaintiff struck from his petition all reference to hospital expenses, and the court thereupon overruled the general demurrer. The defendant Waitt interposed the same demurrer, with the additional ground that from the allegations of the petition it appeared that the city court of Carrollton had no jurisdiction of him, but that the superior court of Fulton county alone had such jurisdiction. This demurrer was likewise overruled.

The Southern Railway Company filed a petition for removal to the Federal court, insisting that no cause of action was set out against Malcolm G. Waitt individually, as no acts of misfeasance on his part were alleged, sufficient to charge him individually with [547]*547liability for tbe plaintiffs injury, but that the cause of action set out in the petition was solely against the Southern Railway Company, a foreign corporation; that the cause of action set out in the petition was a separable controversy, as between the Southern Railway Company and the said Waitt, in that the negligence alleged against Waitt was predicated solely upon his individual conduct, whereas the negligence alleged against the railway company was predicated upon the conduct of Waitt and the defendant’s other agents and employees, to wit, the porter, the flagman, the ticket collector, etc. The court denied the petition for removal.

The trial of the case resulted in a verdict for the defendants. A motion for a new trial was made by the plaintiff and was granted by the court. The motion for a new trial was based upon the general grounds, and also upon several special grounds, in which it was contended that the trial judge, in his charge to the jury, omitted to instruct them sufficiently as to the degree of care which the defendants owed to the plaintiff, and also to instruct them specifically touching the alleged negligence in permitting the plaintiff to remain without succor for such a long period of time where he had fallen from the moving train. It was also complained that the court erred in admitting certain testimony from the engineer of the defendant company, touching a statement made to him by the conductor as to the time when the plaintiff fell from the train and when notice of his perilous position was brought to the attention of the said conductor.

The defendants separately excepted to the grant of the motion for a new trial, as well as to the overruling of their demurrers, and the two cases are considered together, inasmuch as they raise the identical points, with the exception of the question of removal to the Federal court presented by the Southern Railway Company.

1. The first question that .logically presents itself for determi-^ nation is whether 'or not the petition sets out any individual liability on the part of the servant or agent who is sued jointly with the master. If the servant could not be held individually liable for the resulting injury to the plaintiff, the suit would be merely a suit against the master, the Southern Railway Company; and,'that company not being a domestic corporation, and the amount involved being more than $3,000, the case would be removable upon [548]*548proper application. Again, if the cause of action was clearly separable, the foreign corporation would be entitled to removal upon complying, as it did, with the requirements of the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
90 S.E. 94, 18 Ga. App. 544, 1916 Ga. App. LEXIS 1109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-railway-co-v-sewell-gactapp-1916.