DocketNumber: 18671
Citation Numbers: 38 Ga. App. 529, 144 S.E. 347, 1928 Ga. App. LEXIS 331
Judges: Bell
Filed Date: 8/31/1928
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/8/2024
Mrs. W. M. Newberry brought suit against the City of Macon for the homicide of her husband, alleged to have been caused by the defendant’s negligence in the maintenance of a hole sixteen inches deep, about three feet wide, and several feet long, in Carling Avenue, one of the defendant’s streets, and near the intersection of that street with Rembert Avenue. The transaction is the identical one considered by this court on demurrer in City of Macon v. Newberry, 35 Ga. App. 252 (132 S. E. 917), where it was held that the petition failed to set forth a cause of action and should have been dismissed on general demurrer. It is apparent that the action was subsequently withdrawn and then renewed. The allegations in the second petition vary but slightly from those in the original suit.
In the complaint as last filed it was alleged that the plaintiff’s husband was traveling out Rembert Avenue in a one-horse wagon on his way home, and, in turning to the right into Carling Avenue around the hole and at a safe distance therefrom he would have passed by if the horse “had not shied and suddenly turned to his right, — suddenly running the right front wheel of his wagon into said hole, throwing your petitioner’s husband . . out of the wagon,” and causing him the injuries from which he died. The
After the introduction of evidence by the plaintiff, the court awarded a nonsuit, and the plaintiff excepted.
The evidence established the existence of the hole, about as alleged in the petition. The only witness to the accident who was introduced was C. A. Williams, who testified: “I live at 201 Carling Avenue. I remember the accident Mr. Newberry had out there on the streets. I saw it. I was sitting on my porch suing looking at it. He was coming out Bembert Avenue and turned down Carling Avenue. I couldn’t tell exactly what rate of speed, just a little slow jog of a trot, his horse was going. He was going a little faster than a man can walk, something like that. When he got to the intersection of Bembert and Carling Avenue, the wheels ran into a little gulley there, the front wheel in a little gulley, and he had a spring seat on the wagon, and it sorter throwed him forward, hind one dropped in, and the next I seen was his heels up and he fell out forwards. . . Mr. Newberry was pulling the left-hand rein that guided the horse around the hole, and seemed like the horse swayed back the least bit to the right. The horse did not do it suddenly;.just as he slowed it seemed like he swayed back a little; when the horse swayed back was when the wheel dropped into the hole. I suppose if the horse had gone like Mr. Newberry was driving him it would have dropped in before, because the hole reached away out. After the horse turned, he turned at the corner like this, and after he turned the wheel dropped in, because it was on the lower corner; he had to turn the corner before the wheel dropped in. . . When I first saw Mr. Newberry coming down the street the horse was in a slow trot, there was no change in the horse’s speed as I could tell. The horse did not get frightened at anything that I saw. The horse did not shy, he seemed to sway when he slackened his line. As he slackened his line to make a
It is apparent from the evidence that the plaintiff’s husband knew of the defect in the street and observed it at the particular time, but that he either carelessly waited too late to guide his horse around it or else was negligent in not guiding him properly. The petition alleged that the horse shied, implying a sudden start, as from fright. The evidence, however, showed only a swaying, as a leaning or inclining to one side rather than the other. The hole was not the cause of any action on the part of the horse, either shying or swaying. If the decedent did not control the horse, his failure to do so was not the result of the defendant’s negligence. The horse was subject to control, and the decedent could easily have driven him in such manner as to have avoided the injury.
According to the evidence the horse “seemed to sway when he [the decedent] slackened his line,” or “when the wheel dropped into the hole.” Since it appears from the evidence that the horse was entirely subject to the will of the plaintiff, and the other facts are not materially different from those alleged in the first petition, the question of error in the granting of the nonsuit is controlled adversely to the plaintiff in error by the law of the case as laid down by this court in the former hearing. The ruling then made was as follows: “In a suit against a municipal corporation for damages
Judgment affirmed.