Southern Railway Co. v. West

62 S.E. 141, 4 Ga. App. 672, 1908 Ga. App. LEXIS 506
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedAugust 4, 1908
Docket1095
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 62 S.E. 141 (Southern Railway Co. v. West) 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. West, 62 S.E. 141, 4 Ga. App. 672, 1908 Ga. App. LEXIS 506 (Ga. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Hill, C. J.

West sued the Southern Railway Company to recover damages for personal injuries. The material portions of his petition are as follows: “(3) That on said 10th day of July, 1905, petitioner was employed and for sometime prior thereto had [673]*673been, emploj'-ed by defendant as a member of what was known as the ‘bridge gang/ and as snch was engaged in the work of building and repairing bridges, trestles, and depots on its said system of railroads, both in Alabama and in Georgia. (4) That as such employee, petitioner, together with the other members of said bridge gang, was required by defendant to cook, eat, and live in some old passenger coaches furnished them for that purpose by said defendant, which said coaches were moved by the engines and trains of defendant on its said lines of railroad as it became necessary for said bridge gang to move from one place of work to another; and that while going from one place of work to another, it was usual and customary for the members of said bridge gang to be transported by defendant in said cars, no other means being provided them. (5) That your petitioner, along with said bridge gang, had been for some time prior thereto at work painting a bridge on defendant’s line of railroad, about two miles east of "Weems, in Jefferson county, Alabama; the work on said bridge being completed on said 10th day of July, 1905. (G) That in the evening of said 10th day of July, 1905, when the work on said bridge had been completed, petitioner, together with the others of said bridge gang, in accordance with the orders and directions of the foreman of said bridge gang, went aboard said cars, and the same were attached to a freight train, and defendant undertook to transport the same into Birmingham, Ala., a distance of about twenty miles. (7) That while traveling on said train, petitioner was not engaged in any work, had nothing whatever to do with the running or operation of said train, and had no control over any of those engaged in the running or operation of said train; but he was, in effect, a passenger on said train, and defendant owed him the duty of extraordinary diligence for his safety. (8) That the coach so furnished by defendant, as aforesaid, and in which petitioner was riding, the same being called the sleeping car, was an old passenger coach, the wood and wooden draft timbers of which were decayed. The wood in the drawhead used to couple said coach on to others was old, decayed, and not sufficients strong to make it safe to couple and use said coach in running on a railroad. The iron key, and the iron pin in said key, used in holding said drawhead in and to said draft timbers, was old, worn, and defective, and by reason thereof unsafe to use in coupling and [674]*674■carrying said coach, with petitioner therein, on said railroad. All -of said defects were unknown to petitioner, hut were known or ■could have been known to defendant, in the exercise of extraordinary diligence due to him as a passenger on said car. (9) That while said coaches were being carried on defendant’s said line of railroad, and at a point about seven miles from Birmingham, they were suddenly, violently, and unnecessarily jerked forward, then and there jerking and breaking and pulling said pin out of said key, tearing and breaking from their places the said pin and key and said draft timbers in the front end of the coach in which petitioner was riding, and jerking and breaking said drawhead and said pin and key by which it was fastened to said draft timbers of said coach, thereby causing said coach to become uncoupled and detached from the car immediately in front of it. The said drawhead immediately dropped from its place to the ground and ties on said track, one end or part of said drawhead standing on the ties, and the other end up to and against the iron axle of the front trucks of said coach, thereby forcing the front end and truck of said coach up and off the track. (10) That at the time .said coach was so derailed, said train was being run at a high and dangerous rate of speed, the same being about thirty miles per hour; and, after said coach was so derailed, it continued to run •on the ground and on the cross-ties along said track for a distance of more than one hundred feet; that after it was derailed and before it stopped, it was running, jumping, and violently tossing, leaning and careening from one side to the other on and across the cross-ties and on the ground, and, as petitioner believed, was in constant and immediate danger of being turned over; that while said coach was thus tossing and careening, your petitioner, with the others in said coach, including the foreman of said bridge gang, were caused thereby to become greatly excited, agitated, and alarmed for his safety, and while so, believing that his life was in danger, without time for reflection or deliberation, in company with said foreman and other persons in said coach, he jumped from said ■coach to the ground.” The injuries received by the petitioner are fully described in the petition.

The defendant demurred to the petition and moved the court to dismiss it, because “the plaintiff sues as a passenger on the defendant’s train, and seeks to hold it to a degree of care required of [675]*675a common carrier in its relation to a passenger, while the facts alleged by him show that be was not a passenger, but was an employee of the defendant, engaged in his duties as such, and was riot entitled to the same degree of care as a passenger, and, being an employee, that he owed the defendant duties as an employee which, are not owed by a passenger.” The court overruled the demurrer, and the defendant assigns error on this judgment. Two questions are presented to this court for determination: (1) Do the facts as set forth in the petition constitute the plaintiff a passenger? (2) Are the allegations of the petition sufficient to set forth a good cause of action by the servant against the master for the master’s own negligence?

In determining the legal status of the plaintiff at the time he received the injuries complained of, the question must be decided according to the general law, and not under any statutory law of this State, where the suit was brought, or of the State of Alabama, where the injury occurred. No statute of the State of Alabama is pleaded as a basis of recovery, and, of course, no statute of this State would be applicable to the case. We think that the facts set forth in the declaration make a good cause of action, under the common law, to recover damages for personal injuries. If these facts show that the plaintiff was at the time a passenger, he was entitled, under the principles of the common law, to extraordinary care and diligence by the defendant. If the facts show that he was, mot a passenger, but was a servant, and that his injuries were inflicted by the negligence of the master, without any contributory .negligence on his part, he would be entitled to ordinary diligence on the part of the master. In our opinion, under the facts as set forth by the plaintiff, he did not occupy the relation of a passenger to the defendant when he received his injuries.

The status of employees of railroad companies, not connected with the running of the trains, and while being transported upon the trains of the companies, has frequently been before the courts. 'There is some conflict as to whether an employee carried to and from his work on a car, while being so carried, becomes a passenger, or remains as an employee.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 S.E. 141, 4 Ga. App. 672, 1908 Ga. App. LEXIS 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-railway-co-v-west-gactapp-1908.