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PADGETT v. CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY COMPANY.
36543.
Tort; automobile and train collision. Before Judge Anderson. Richmond Superior Court. November 6, 1956.
TOWNSEND, J.
J. C. Padgett filed an action for damages in the Superior Court of Richmond County resulting from a collision between the automobile which he was driving and a standing boxcar of a train belonging to the defendant Central of Georgia Railway Co. The trial court sustained a general demurrer to the petition, and the exception is to this ruling.
The petition alleges in substance that the Gordon superhighway on which the plaintiff was traveling goes over a bridge in the area in question and gradually curves downgrade and across two tracks of the defendant railroad; that the tracks are about 500 yards from the bridge; that due to the curve the boxcars on the railroad tracks, which are level with the pavement, can first be seen in the daylight at a distance of 100 yards film the crossing, but the plaintiff was proceeding at night with impaired visibility due to the presence of shadows and the "fact that the pavement was black and the boxcars were of a dark color, and both blended together," because of which facts, at that time and place, the presence of boxcars standing across the highway could not be seen until the driver was within 180 feet of them; that when he reached a point 180 feet away he immediately applied his brakes, but the new asphalt pavement was slippery and the road was downgrade and because of these facts he was unable to stop before colliding with the boxcars.
(a) It is further alleged that the defendant had, unknown to the plaintiff, parked a train with several freight cars across the second track; that the superhighway in question is one of the most heavily traveled in the State, but the defendant negligently failed to have a flagman or any kind of light, danger signal or warning indicating the train was across the highway, and that this was the proximate cause of the injuries received. It is well settled that merely blocking a public crossing is not actionable negligence, but that it may be so to block such a crossing without giving warning that it is so doing where some reason appears which "required the railroad to provide one or more of the extraordinary precautions set forth in the petition." Bassett v. Callaway, 72 Ga. App. 97 (33 S. E. 2d 112); Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. Coxwell, 93 Ga. App. 159, 169 (91 S. E. 2d 135); Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. Marshall, 89 Ga. App. 740 (2) (81 S. E. 2d 228). The petition alleges the further facts that the new asphalt roadway is slippery and downgrade and its condition prevents the driver of an automobile from stopping within 180 feet, which facts were well known to the defendant. This court cannot take judicial notice that the new Gordon superhighway is not slippery on the basis that new asphalt is not slippery, when the petition alleges that it is slippery. The condition of the road is a matter for the jury, not this court, to decide, and the contention of the defendant in error that these alleged facts should as a matter of law be held untrue or insufficient to charge the railway company with negligence is rejected. The petition poses a jury question as to the negligence of the defendant in parking the box-cars under all the conditions recited in the petition.
(b) There appears next the question of whether the petition affirmatively shows that the plaintiff was guilty of negligent conduct (aside from any negligence in discovering the negligence of the defendant) which preponderated to cause his injuries and would thus bar him under Code 105-603. The plaintiff shows that he was traveling about 45 miles per hour, which is below the lawful speed limit, on a new superhighway. He was unfamiliar with the road and the fact that there was a railroad crossing ahead. His lights and brakes were in good working order, despite which fact he says that because of the dark night, the shadows, the dark color of the asphalt and the boxcars which all blended together, it was impossible to see the obstacle until one approached to 180 feet of it, and that immediately upon reaching such point he did see it and did apply his brakes and would have stopped except for the slippery, downgrade condition of the road. Savannah & Atlanta Ry. Co. v. Newsome, 90 Ga. App. 390 (83 S. E. 2d 80), is authority both for the proposition that one is not always required to drive so that he may stop within the range of his headlights, and that the lights of an automobile may under some conditions hit an obstacle ahead such as a boxcar without illuminating it, as is here alleged. Accordingly, it does not appear that the manner in which the plaintiff alleged he was using the highway constituted negligence sufficient to bar recovery as a matter of law.
The trial court erred in sustaining the general demurrer to the petition.
Judgment reversed. Gardner, P. J., and Carlisle, J., concur.
Hull, Willingham, Towill & Norman, Robert C. Norman, contra.
Isaac S. Peebles, Jr., for plaintiff in error.
DECIDED FEBRUARY 6, 1957.
Tuesday October 7 10:31 CDT


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