75 S.E. 1105 | N.C. | 1912
Civil action to recover damages to plaintiff's land, caused by the building of a railroad embankment.
Defendant duly pleaded three and five years statute of limitations. At the close of the testimony, on adverse intimation from the court, the plaintiff submitted to a nonsuit and appealed.
Our statute, Revisal, sec. 394, subsec. 2, provides as follows: "No suit, action, or proceeding shall be brought or maintained against any railroad company by any person for damages caused by the construction of said road or the repairs thereto, unless such suit, action, or proceeding shall be commenced within five years after the cause of action accrues; and the jury shall assess the entire amount of damages *480
which the party aggrieved is entitled to recover by reason of the trespass on his property." The summons in this action was first issued on 17 September, 1908, and, on a perusal of the entire testimony, that of plaintiff and others, it clearly appears that the embankment complained of was constructed by the Carolina Northern Railroad Company in 1901, and has been since maintained; that the rights and interest of said company have been duly conveyed to the present defendant, the Raleigh and Charleston Railroad Company. It further appears that the enbankment, at the time of its erection, produced the same physical conditions, necessarily causing the same or substantial injury and interference on plaintiff's land that have existed since. Upon the admitted facts, therefore, and in any aspect of the matter, the plaintiff's cause of action is barred by the statute of limitations above quoted. Pickett v. R. R.,
Affirmed.
Cited: Duval v. R. R.,