This was a suit by Tasker Arp, by his next friend, against the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company to recover damages for a personal injury. In the petition it was alleged, that a private way from a public road which passed by the house of petitioner’s father intersected the track of the defendant company ; that this private way had been in constant and uninterrupted use by the people in the neighborhood as a private road for more
1. The demurrer was general and special. The special grounds of demurrer, because of indefiniteness, were cured by appropriate amendments. It was also urged that the allegations made-as the basis of the defendant’s liability, that the defendant’s servants in charge of the train saw or in the exercise of ordinary care could have seen the petitioner, and yet omitted precautions to avoid striking him, were lacking in certainty and left the defendant in doubt as to whether the plaintiff was seeking recovery upon the theory that the defendant’s servants saw plaintiff’s peril and willfully and wantonly ran their train against him, or whether they were negligent in not seeing him. We do not think the allegations of 'the petition show any purpose on the part of the pleader to charge that the defendant’s servants wantonly ran their train against the child. The liability of the defendant is alleged to consist in certain acts of omission. The allegation that the servants
2. The petition set out a cause of action. It alleged circumstances authorizing an inference of a duty on the part of the servants of the railroad company to anticipate the presence of a person on the track where crossed by the private way, which was in constant and uninterrupted use by the people of the neighborhood with the knowledge and consent of the railroad company, and the failure of the servants in charge of the defendant’s train to observe that duty in detecting a person on the crossing and in stopping the train. The tender age of the plaintiff precludes any inference of contributory negligence on his part. Crawford v. Southern Railway Company, 106 Ga. 870 (33 S. E. 826); Bullard v. Southern Railway Company, 116 Ga. 644 (43 S. E. 39).
3. The court charged: “If the plaintiff was on the track and the engineer discovered him for some distance [before] he got to him, it was his duty to stop the train whenever the plaintiff was seen; and if he failed to do this, and the plaintiff was injured on account of such failure, the defendant would be liable.” The error assigned is that this excerpt amounted- to an instruction by the court that the engineer was negligent; and that the charge was misleading, because of the indefiniteness of the time and place when and where the duty was upon the engineer to stop the train. The instruction in defining the duty of the engineer did not take into account the time when he discovered the child upon the track or his ability to stop the train when discovery was made, but the jury were told that if he discovered the child upon the track and failed to stop his train and the plaintiff was injured on account of such failure, the defendant would be liable. It may be that at the time the child’s presence upon the track was discovered by the engineer in the exercise of ordinary and proper care it would have been impossible for him to stop the train soon enough to avoid the injury. Indeed, according to the evidence submitted by the defendant, several children, one of whom was the plaintiff, were
Judgment reversed.'