Western Atlantic R. v. Gardner

40 S.E.2d 672, 74 Ga. App. 599, 1946 Ga. App. LEXIS 593
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedDecember 4, 1946
Docket31211.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 40 S.E.2d 672 (Western Atlantic R. v. Gardner) 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
Western Atlantic R. v. Gardner, 40 S.E.2d 672, 74 Ga. App. 599, 1946 Ga. App. LEXIS 593 (Ga. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinions

1. There was sufficient evidence to authorize the verdict.

2. Although the evidence for the plaintiff contained contradictions, there was no abuse of discretion in denying a new trial, based solely on the general grounds. Clemons v. State, 159 Ga. 425 (125 S.E. 800).

DECIDED DECEMBER 4, 1946.
This is a suit for damages by H. Z. Gardner against Western and Atlantic Railroad Company on account of alleged negligence: "(a) In causing said [railroad] cars to lurch forward *Page 600 with a quick, sudden, violent, unusual, and unnecessary jerk as petitioner was alighting therefrom as herein alleged; (b) in not gradually slowing said cars down so petitioner could dismount from same at said time and place; (c) in not warning petitioner of its intention to make said lurch in the movement of the train, so that he would not attempt to alight therefrom while performing his duties at said time and place as herein alleged."

The action was by an employee of the railroad company against the company under the Federal Employer's Liability Act to recover damages for the infliction of a personal injury. The defendant denies being guilty of any negligence, and contends that, if the plaintiff was injured at the time and place alleged, such injury was due to and was the result of his own negligence solely, and that the inguinal hernias of the plaintiff were congenital and were brought about through no fault or negligence of the defendant Western and Atlantic Railroad. The jury found a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $628.91. The defendant moved for a new trial, which motion was overruled, and he excepted.

The only testimony for the plaintiff was that of the plaintiff himself, H. Z. Gardner, who testified in part: "I am forty-six years old. I am employed by the N.C. St. L. Railroad, and have been so employed since March of 1944, in the capacity of a brakeman. As a brakeman I run from Atlanta, Georgia, to Chattanooga, Tennessee. I haven't lost any time since I have been with this road, except when I was off hurt." He stated that on the day he was injured he was the head brakeman on a freight train of said company traveling from Chattanooga to Atlanta. As such brakeman on said freight train, "my duties required me to cut switches, follow the engine, cut loose cars and connect them, swinging on and off . . and it was necessary for me to swing on and off the cars that day on this train." He testified further that it was necessary for him to swing on and off the cars while switching in Marietta at the time he was injured on August 26, 1944. He stated that this is what happened when he was injured: "I cut loose the train and came down to the switch and threw the switch, and had backed up into the long track, and gave the engineer the signal to pull out to throw these cars back on the train, and when I was coming out there I was swinging on the side of the car with the grapiron, and just as I got to the switch to swing off and to let the other *Page 601 cars pass so that I could line the switch back to the main line, he gave a hard jerk, the engineer did, just as I was stepping off the train on the ground, and it caused me to hit the ground hard. Something happened to me at that time; I felt a hurting right after that in my groins down here. I continued working though, and worked on into Atlanta. I did say something to somebody about getting hurt along about that time; I said something to the engineer after we headed in at Rosewood, a sidetrack just below the station down there; we headed in there and stopped, and I told him I hadn't had anything to eat since we left Chattanooga, and I reckoned it was hunger pains, and I told him my stomach was hurting me, and he raised up his box there and got some crackers and gave me something to eat. I felt this hurting in my groins there almost immediately after I left the train, but I didn't know what it was, I thought it was hunger pains because I had been on duty so long. I did have pains right after that. And the engineer says, `I have got some crackers here in the seat,' and he reached in there and got them. I said we had left Chattanooga somewhere around ten o'clock on the night of August 25th, and we were here in Marietta the next morning between eight and nine o'clock. I hadn't had anything to eat from the time we left Chattanooga until we got here in Marietta. And so I thought these pains I suffered there at that time were hunger pains. Then when I got to Atlanta I went on and put my engine up, and then I went on home and went to bed. I did not know at that time that I had a hernia. It is still paining me down there. This was on a Saturday. Then on the next day [after the accident], Sunday, I just laid around. While I was laying down I didn't have any pains then, I was practically easy when I was laying down, and that was the reason I laid down. I laid down off and on all that day, I was up and down. Then on the next day, on Monday, after this occurred on Saturday, I saw a doctor. I went to see my doctor, Dr. Shackleford, and he made an examination of me at that time. I had made an examination of myself before I went to him, and I had found a knot on my side Sunday afternoon [the next day after the accident], it was hurting me so bad. That knot was on my right side, right in there (indicating). Prior to this time that I stepped off of this car here, that I was talking about, I did not have any hernia, nor did I have any knot in my side. I had never been ruptured *Page 602 before. When I went to work for this railroad in March of 1944 I was subjected to a physical examination. The doctor that made that physical examination was Dr. Persons, the railroad doctor or physician. He passed me at that time as being fit for brakeman's service, and I was employed after that. This jerk now that I was talking about when I went to step off of the guard there, that was just a jerk, a lunge forward, like that. It was not an easy kind of a jerk. As to what the difference was between it and the ordinary jerks — well, it was just harder, and it caught me right in the act of stepping off too. There was no reason at all for making that jerk. And when my feet came in contact with the ground they hit the ground hard. I am forty-six years old now, but I was forty-five years old at that time. After I was examined by Dr. Shackleford, my family physician, on Monday [two days after the accident], he then sent me to the railroad; he told me I could work like I was, and that I would have to have an operation, and then I went to the railroad office. That was out at Hills Park, in Fulton County, and I saw Mr. Phillips out there, the train master, there in his office. I told him that I had been to see my family physician, and I told him what my family physician had said. Mr. Phillips then sent me to Doctor Ward, the railroad doctor, and Doctor Ward then made an examination of me. After he made his examination of me, I then went to the hospital. Doctor Ward told me that I had a hernia, and I went to the Emory University Hospital, where Doctor Ward performed an operation on me, in fact two operations. Those operations were not performed the same day, but one of them was on the 13th, and the other one was on the 29th, two different operations. I was in the hospital from that for thirty-one days. I went back to work for the railroad after that. I think that condition was cured by the operation. I went back to work on the 13th of December, I think it was. From the time that I was injured on the 26th of August, 1944, until I went back to work I lost 108 days from my work. My average day's work paid me $9.54 a day; and as I said, I lost 108 days.

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Related

Davis v. State
53 S.E.2d 545 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1949)

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Bluebook (online)
40 S.E.2d 672, 74 Ga. App. 599, 1946 Ga. App. LEXIS 593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-atlantic-r-v-gardner-gactapp-1946.