This is аn action to recover damages for personal injuries received by the plaintiff, who wаs struck by a train operated by the defendant and thrown, from his wagon. There was testimony tending to prоve that the plaintiff was traveling along a public highway within the corporate limits of the city of Nеw Bern, where the highway crossed the track at an acute angle, both the plaintiff and the train gоing in the same relative direction; that no signal for the crossing was given, either by bell or whistle; that the plaintiff stopped, looked and listened and heard nothing. In view of this evidence, both the defendant’s motion to non-suit was properly refused, as were also the prayers for the direction of the verdict. There was conflicting evidence, but any such conflict must be reconciled or dеtermined by the jury alone, the constitutional triers of fact. All that this Court can say is that, taking the evidence of the plaintiff as true, and construing all the evidence in the light most favorable to the plаintiff, there was more than a scintilla of evidence tending to prove his contention.
Printing Co. v. Raleigh,
It is well settled by the repeated adjudications of this Court that the “failure of an engineer in charge of а locomotive to ring the bell or sound the whistle on approaching the crossing of a public highway, or a point where the public have been habitually permitted to cross,” is at least
evidence
of negligence.
Hinkle v. Railroad Co.,
In
Edwards v.
Railroad,
His Honor charged the jury among other things as follows: “If you find that the defendant sounded the whistlе and had the hell rung, and had the headlight lighted up, all for a reasonable distance before rеaching the crossing- you should answer the first issue ‘No-.’ (But the evidence shows that the plaintiff was injured in a collision with the defendant’s locomotive, and if you find that the defendant did not give the signals or any of them, you should answer the first issue Yes.’)” The defendant excepted to so much of the
*85
above charge as is enclosed in parentheses. We think this exception should be sustained, inasmuch as his Honor made the liability of the defendant to depend entirely upon its negligence, regardless of the fact whether such negligence was the proximate cause of the injury. In the ease at bаr the first issue was as follows: “Did- the defendant negligently and carelessly run its engine against plaintiff and injure him as alleged in the complaint?” This question has been directly decided in
Edwards v.
Railroad,
Nor this error in the charge there must be a New trial.
