Southern Railway Co. v. Young

93 S.E. 51, 20 Ga. App. 362, 1917 Ga. App. LEXIS 898
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 27, 1917
Docket8235
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 93 S.E. 51 (Southern Railway Co. v. Young) 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. Young, 93 S.E. 51, 20 Ga. App. 362, 1917 Ga. App. LEXIS 898 (Ga. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Wade, C. J.

In order that the precise ruling here made may be understood, the original petition filed by the plaintiff, and the amendment afterwards offered and allowed, are given in full, as follows: ■

“The petition of J. M. Young shows:
“1. That the Southern Railway Company, hereinafter termed defendant, is a corporation operating a railroad and having an office and agency in said county.
“2. -That the defendant has injured and damaged your petitioner in the sum of twenty thousand ($20,000.00) dollars by the reason of the facts hereinafter set forth.
. “3. That petitioner during the year 1914 was engaged in the purchase and shipment of cattle.
“4. That on the 14th day of August, 1914, he had purchased and shipped, from Denton, a. station of the Georgia & Florida Railroad Company, a number of cattle from said station of Denton to the city of Macon by way of Hazlehurst, and that upon the arrival of said cattle at Hazlehurst they were to be transferred to the [363]*363line of the defendant company and thence carried to the city of Macon.
“5. That on the evening of the said 14th day of August, 1914, he left the station of Denton and went to Hazlehurst, arriving there at 10:30 P. M. and upon his arrival he left the depot of the Georgia & Florida Railroad Company and went to the passenger depot of the Southern Railway Company to wait for the arrival of a north-bound train; that the agent of the defendant at said depot informed him that the train that he desired to take had already passed, but that there would be another train some time after midnight.
“6. Petitioner shows that he was interested in seeing his cattle transferred and carried by the next north-bound freight train of the defendant to the city of Macon, which freight train was due to arrive according to the information given him some time before midnight, and that he waited in the depot of the defendant for the arrival of such train for the purpose of attending to the transfer of his cattle for shipment that night to Macon.
“7. Petitioner shows that the Georgia & Florida Railroad track crosses the track of the defendant between a quarter and half a mile south of the passenger depot of the defendant, and at such crossing all trains are required to stop by the law of the State.
“8. That- upon the arrival of his cattle at Hazlehurst that night, they were transferred to a side-track near a stock-pen of the defendant, and the car in which they were located and stock-pen were situated between the passenger depot of the defendant and the said railroad crossing, and they were to be attached or loaded on the freight train of the defendant company upon its arrival at Hazlehurst from this side-track or stock-pen.
“9. Petitioner shows that, after waiting in the passenger depot of the defendant for some time for the arrival of the train; he heard a north-bound train of the defendant blow for said railroad crossing, and this was between 12 and 1 o’clock.
“10. That the right of way of the defendant in front of its passenger depot and extending southward has been elevated by the defendant by enclosing the same within a stone or plank wall, and sand has been placed in said enclosed area for the convenience and advantage of passengers boarding and alighting from its train, and that said elevated walk or area extends between 30 and 50 yards south of said depot.
[364]*364“11. That there is a public crossing between the said passenger depot and the crossing where the Georgia & Florida crosses the defendant’s track and said crossing is but a very short distance from the southern extremity of said elevated walk.
“12. That upon hearing the whistle of the north-bound train below the railroad crossing, petitioner left the depot and started to go to the place where his cattle were, and see them shipped to Macon, and, in so doing, walked along by the side of the track of the defendant in a well marked path which had been long used by the public, and while so walking the engine of the defendant’s train, which proved to be a passenger, and not a freight, train passed him at a rapid rate of speed, and some portion of said engine or some part of the coaches struck his left side and knocked him down and he was injured as hereinafter set forth, and he was struck before he could get out of the way of said rapidly moving train.
“13. That he had arrived within a few feet of the public crossing when he was struck by defendant’s train.
“14. That as he approached said crossing he was in plain view of the agents and employees of the defendant operating said approaching engine, and was seen, or, in the exercise of ordinary care on their part, could and should have [been] seen by them as he was walking down said track and approaching said crossing.
“15. That he knew that the crossing was a public crossing, and he did [not] anticipate or expect that said train would run over said crossing without checking its speed, but would slow up as required by law.
“16. Petitioner shows that, instead of slowing up or stopping as they approached said crossing, they ran over the same and passed him at a speed of between 15 and 20 miles an-hour.
“17. That the agents and employees operating said train neither rang the bell nor Mowed the whistle as they approached said public crossing.
“18. That there was on said 14th day of August, 1914, in p operation in the town of Hazlehurst an ordinance regulating the speed of locomotives and trains within its corporate limits, which prohibited a train from running within its corporate limits at a greater rate of speed than 10 miles per hour.
“19. Petitioner shows that it was the duty of the defendant, [365]*365through its agents and employees operating said north-bound train, to have approached said public crossing at such a rate of speed as to have had the train under control in the event any person was approaching said crossing, or was on said crossing, or had just passed over; that it was the duty of said employees to have run the said train at a speed prescribed by the ordinance, to wit, not more than 10 miles an hour at said place; that it was the duty of said employees to have stopped said train when they saw, or in the exercise of ordinary care could and should have seen, petitioner walking by the side of said. track, and approaching said public crossing, or in any event to have warned him of their approach and of his danger.
“30. Petitioner charges that the defendant,- its agents and employees, were guilty of the following acts of negligence, each and all of which contributed to petitioner’s injury:
“ (a) In that said agents and employees operated said train at a greater rate of speed than 10 miles an hour, contrary to the ordinance of the town of Hazlehurst.

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Bluebook (online)
93 S.E. 51, 20 Ga. App. 362, 1917 Ga. App. LEXIS 898, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-railway-co-v-young-gactapp-1917.