Western & Atlantic Railroad v. Bussey

23 S.E. 207, 95 Ga. 584
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedDecember 4, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 23 S.E. 207 (Western & Atlantic Railroad v. Bussey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court 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 Railroad v. Bussey, 23 S.E. 207, 95 Ga. 584 (Ga. 1894).

Opinion

Atkinson, Justice.

Mrs. Bussey sued the defendant company for damages because of the homicide of her husband, alleged, in substance, to have been caused by the negligence of the agents of the defendant in turning one of its switches to a side-track upon which one of the trains of the company was standing, and in so leaving the switch as that when the train upon which her husband was the engineer was due arrived at that place, his engine took the side-track and collided with the train thereon ; and because the defendant was further negligent in that, it being dark at the time of the collision, its servants gave no warning, by switch lights or otherwise, of the condition of the switch. The declaration further alleged that the engineer who was injured was free from fault. The ■original plaintiff' having died pending the action, the present plaintiff's, who were the children of herself and her deceased husband, were made parties plaintiff by ■their next friend. Upon the trial of the case, many •questions of fact and law arose which involved the interpretation and application of certain rules adopted by the l’ailroad company for the government of its employees. The rules introduced were as follows, to wit:

[587]*587“ Rule 17. All trains must stop at schedule meeting or passing points, unless the switches are plainly seen to be right and the track clear. The point at which a train should stop is the switch to be used by the train to be met or passed in, going in on the siding.
“ Rule 28. Passenger-trains will not exceed thirty-five, nor freight-trains twenty miles per hour.
“ Rule 35. All trains will run with great care after rains, and'slacken their speed when the track is in bad order, while passing switches and when crossing long bridges and trestle-work, and, when practicable, shut off steam.
“ Rule 41. Conductors have entire charge and control of their trains and all persons employed on them, and will be held responsible for the movements of their trains while on the road, except when their directions conflict with the rules, or involve risks or hazards, in either of which cases the engineer will be held alike accountable. Copies of special orders concerning the movement of a train will be furnished to both engineer and conductor, and where such orders are telegraphed, both engineer and conductor must reply by a signal message to the officer by whom the order was issued,- stating how they understand the order, and must not leave the station at which it was received until notified by the proper officer that the order is correctly understood.
“Rule 46. Conductors and enginemen will consult the bulletin board daily and note all new orders.
“Rule 90. The use of spirituous liquors, profane swearing, obscene language, bolstering, swaggering or other conduct unbecoming a gentleman will not be tolerated in the employees of this road, either on trains, at stations, eating-houses or elsewhere. Rudeness or incivility to passengers or other patrons of the road will in all cases meet with immediate punishment.
“Rule 95. Conductors and enginemen will be held equally responsible for the violation of any of the rules governing the safety of trains, and they must take every precaution for the protection of their trains, even if not provided for by the rules.
“Rule 96. Run no risk; take the safe side in case of doubt.
- “ Special Instructions. — Rule 4. The use of intoxieat[588]*588ing liquors is forbidden to the officers and men engaged in the service of the W. & A. R. R. Any one who becomes intoxicated will be dismissed.
“Rule 5. Run no risk; take the safe side in case of doubt.”

There was a verdict for the plaintiffs for six thousand dollars, and defendant’s motion for a new trial having been denied, it excepted. The motion was upon the general grounds, upon the ground that the verdict was excessive, and upon the special grounds with which we now proceed to deal.

1. It appears that upon the trial of the case, plaintiffs’ counsel offered to read in evidence the depositions of one Earwood, a witness for the plaintiffs, the depositions of this witness having been taken before a commissioner under section 8898 et seq. of the code. At the time the plaintiffs offered to read the depositions in evidence, it appeared that the witness was himself present in court; and thereupon the defendant objected to the depositions being read, and insisted that the witness should be put on the stand and examined orally. The court overruled the objection and alloived them to be read. It is urged upon us with great earnestness by counsel for the plaintiff' in error, that these depositions should have been excluded, and that the analogy of decisions rendered in this court in which the answers to interrogatories taken were excluded when the witness was himself present at the trial should be applied to the class of depositions now under consideration. The ground upon which answers to interrogatories, under such circumstances, are excluded, is that such answers are in their nature but secondary evidence. They are allowed under certain circumstances ex necessitate rei, and not because testimony of that character is favored of the law. The allowance of that class of testimony is justified under the statute, upon the supposition that [589]*589the witness is either personally unable to attend upon the trial because of physical infirmity, or because the necessity of his personal attendance would withdraw him temporarily from the performance of some public duty, and upon other like grounds mentioned in the statute; and therefore, his presence was dispensed with and the answers to interrogatories allowed in lieu of an oral examination. The taking of depositions, however, under section 3893 et seq. of the code, does not proceed upou that idea. It is not an ex parte proceeding. It is primarily for the convenience of witnesses themselves, and to relieve them of the necessity'of attending upon trials upon original writs of subpoena, which, in the absence of such provisions, would issue as a matter of course, upon the application of either party, to any resident witness. In the large commercial centers, the courts are almost constantly in session, and to require the personal attendance of witnesses during the trials to which they have been subpoenaed, would involve them in g’reat pecuniary loss and involve a sacrifice of their personal interests without any corresponding personal advantage. It is, therefore, that in counties containing as many as twenty thousand inhabitants, the legislature has wisely provided that at the election of either party .any witness might be examined by a commissioner appointed by the presiding judge. • "When this commissioner sits, he is clothed with a species of judicial character. The witness may be orally examined by the party calling him and cross-examined by the adversary, and the entire result of "the examination is required to be reported to the court; the court at last judging of the competency of the witness and the legality of his testimony. So that in civil cases, the very difficulty •suggested by counsel in argument, that a defendant is not himself confronted with witnesses that testify .against him, is obviated. There is no constitutional re[590]

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Bluebook (online)
23 S.E. 207, 95 Ga. 584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-atlantic-railroad-v-bussey-ga-1894.