1-2. Twice before this case has been before this court for review. The decision made upon its first appearance is reported in 79 Ga. 460, and that made when it was last here appears in 90 Ga. 124. The law of the case seems to have been practically settled by the decision first above indicated. In that case, upon authority of our code provision, it was ruled that liability of railroad companies for injuries committed upon others by persons in their employment was not confined to injuries inflicted by their servants while engaged in running and operating their cars, but extended to injuries inflicted by their employees in the conduct of their business other than those resulting from negligence in running their trains, etc. The effect of this construction placed upon this section of the code is to eliminate entirely from the region of doubt the proposition as to whether railroad companies are answerable generally for torts committed by their employees while engaged in the transaction of the business of their employer. Whatever room there may be for the consideration of'that question by courts in other States, we are concluded, not only by the code provision above referred to, but likewise by the adjudications of this court upon that section of the code. But while the section of the code in question lays down the proposition broadly, that for damage done by any person in the employment and service of such company the latter shall be liable, such language must be understood to mean such torts only as are committed by an employee while engaged about the business of his employer; for it cannot be presumed that the legislature intended that the mere circumstance of a person being in the employment of a railroad company, should render it liable for all torts committed by such employee, whether in any m&nner connected with the performance of his duties to his employer or otherwise.
In tbe present case, tbe husband of the plaintiff was a patron of tbe defendant, having frequent occasion to deal with it and its agents touching tbe transportation of freight; and in the course of one of bis visits to tbe freight office of tbe defendant, and while engaged in discussing bis business relations with tbe agent of tbe company, be was slain by tbe agent. Tbe turning point in tbe case was whether tbe agent of tbe company wrongfully slew tbe husband of tbe plaintiff, and, if so, whether it was done while be was engaged in tbe transaction of tbe company’s business in the line of bis duty because of differences arising, in the settle
The husband of the plaintiff, as we have seen, was a patron of the defendant. He was at the place where he was killed, rightfully and upon the implied invitation of the company to transact his business with its agent, and in the transaction of such business he was at least entitled to protection against the violence and insults of such agent. If in the course of the transaction of such business, upon provocation growing out of the negotiations between the parties, he was wrongfully slain by the agent of the company, the latter would be liable. But even though the homicide might have occurred during the time the negotiations were pending between the agent of the company and the deceased, if the deceased was slain by the agent upon some private feud growing out of other matters wholly disconnected with the transaction of the business then in hand, and upon some provocation given by the deceased, the company would not be liable. If, however, the agent of the company took advantage of the opportunity afforded by the presence of the deceased at his place of business to bring about a difficulty with the deceased upon the occasion of some previous private quarrel, the company would be liable because of the obligation imposed upon it by law to at least afford to its patrons protection against the violence of its agents, when the patron is himself without fault and is engaged about his business with the company. If, however, the patron himself provoke a difficulty which terminates in his homicide, thus withdrawing the agent from the business of the company, to engage in a settlement of an
3. In the course of the trial a number of witnesses were introduced for the plaintiff, tending to show that Dixon, the agent of the company, was a dangerous man, and it was sought to establish this fact, not by general reputation, but by proving that he had had a number of disputes and altercations with different persons; and a motion was made to rule out all of this class of evidence, upon the ground that it was irrelevant and upon the further ground that it was not' admissible for the purpose of showing the dangerous character of the defendant’s agent.
Proof that one is a dangerous man in a general sense involves an inquiry into the character of the person alleged to be dangerous, and any evidence of the existence of a general reputation which tends to establish such a character would be admissible; but it is not competent for a party who offers a witness for the purpose of proving general reputation, either to show particular acts of violence, or manifestations of petulance in particular instances upon the part of the person whose character is under investigation. Whei’e it is sought to establish as against a party or witness a special general character, such general character must rest largely upon the opinions of witnesses, based upon their observation of the conduct of the individual, and upon the impressions formed upon their minds by reports from other persons touching such character; and while upon cross-examination it may be competent to test the value of the opinion of the witness by an inquiry into the knowledge of those particular facts upon ■ which his opinion rests, the reputation of the person whose character is under review, must at last be established by general reputation, and not by special acts. As has been well said by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, in the case of Frazier v. Pa. R. R. Co., 38 Pa. St. 110: “Character grows out of special acts,