J. W. Joiner and Ms wife, M. E. Joiner, brought separate actions against the Georgia Railway and Electric Company, for damages alleged to have been sustained by each of them by reason of the negligent running of one of the defendant company’s cars: In each case there was a general demurrer to the petition, which was overruled; to which ruling, in each case, the defendant excepted. As the acts of negligence charged in the two cases were substantially the same, the cases were argued together before this court. The allegations of the petitions, in so far as they need be considered in passing on the questions presented for our determination, are, in substance, as follows: The defendant company operated an electric line of street-railway along the East Point and College Park public road, in Fulton county. Near Fort McPherson the track of this line of the defendant’s railway crosses, nearly at right angles, a spur-track of the Central of Georgia Railway Company, running from its main line into Fort McPherson barracks. On the occasion in question, Joiner and his wife were
I. This court has held, that while a railroad company has a right to make all the noises incident to the movement and running of its engines, and to give the usual and proper signals of danger, as the sounding of whistles and ringing of bells, and while it will not be liable for injuries occasioned by horses driven upon the highway taking fright at such noises, if it exercised the right in a lawful and reasonable manner, yet, when approaching or running alongside of public streets or thoroughfares, it is the duty of the company to so operate its cars as not unnecessarily to interfere with the rights of individuals traveling such streets or thoroughfares by other modes of travel, or to endanger such travel by unnecessary noises, frightening horses; and for damages resulting from a breach of such duty the company would be liable. Georgia Railroad Co. v. Carr, 73 Ga. 557. But it is only where the company’s servants make unusual noises in the runniug of its trains, and where no necessity for the making of such noises is made to appear, that it is liable for injuries resulting in consequence thereof. Morgan v. Central Railroad, 77 Ga. 788. See also, in this connection, Hill v.
2. The Civil Code, § 2234, declares: “Whenever the tracks of separate and independent railroads cross each other in this State, all engine-drivers and conductors must cause the trains which they respectively drive and conduct to come to a full stop within fifty feet of the place of crossing, and then to move forward slowly. The train of the road first, constructed and put in operation shall have the privilege of crossing first.” As was said in Savannah Railway v. Williams, 111 Ga. 414, “the .constitution, statutes, and decisions of this State recognize that the word ‘ railroad’ is generic, and includes street-railroads, narrow-gauge roads, horse-car companies, dummy-lines and street-railroads operated by electricity. Whether a particular statute applies to any one of these various forms of railroads is to be determined from the language of the statute, from the context, or from the intent of the lawmakers.” Applying this rule of construction to the statute under consideration, it is obvious, we think, that the statute does not apply to street-railroads. In Savannah Railway v. Beasley, 94 Ga. 142, it was held that a street-railway company is under no duty to stop its cars before reaching the crossing óf a public highway. The statute requiring railroad trains to stop before crossing public highways and the one requiring railroad trains to stop before crossing the tracks of other railroads are similar in object, and the penalty for failure to comply with the statute .is, in each instance, the same. If the law as to stopping before reaching public highways does not apply to street-railways, then, by analogy, it would seem that the law does not require the cars of a street-railroad company to stop before crossing a railroad track. Judgment affirmed.