65 S.E. 604 | N.C. | 1909
Action for damages for personal injury. Judgment for plaintiff Defendant appealed. The train stopped at the coal chute, a short distance before getting to New Bern, as was its custom. The plaintiff got off there, as his house was close by. He testified that he had been in the habit of doing so, without objection by the railroad authorities, ever since he had been living there, some three years. The chute was in town limits, about three blocks from the station. It was not a station, but the uncontradicted evidence was that for years people in that part of the *50 town had been getting on and off at that point, without objection (51) or hindrance from the railroad officials, and that while no tickets were sold there the conductors would collect the fare. Several well-beaten paths or streets lead to the railroad at the chute. When the train stopped there, on this occasion, the plaintiff got off on the side next to his home. There was a string of cars on the other side; it was very dark, and at that time the defendant had no lights there. The chute was close beside the track — the defendant's witness says 7 feet 4 inches from the chute to the center of the track. The chute was 17 1/2 feet wide, 31 feet long and 75 feet high. The defendant's witness says it was "perfectly practical to have put a rail there," which would have "kept the plaintiff from falling in." The plaintiff testified that he was proceeding cautiously, but had not taken more than two or three steps after he got off the train before he fell in the chute, and was injured by falling some fifteen feet down the chute.
There are several exceptions, but in effect there is but one, which is that there was no evidence of negligence to submit the case to the jury. We think his Honor properly held that there was.
It is not altogether unusual in the suburbs of a town for the engine to stop at a coal chute or water tank and for people in that part of the town to get on and off at such place for their own convenience. Johnson Street in Raleigh is a well-known instance. When the railroad for a long series of years has permitted such practice as has been here testified, it was negligence not to put a railing across the mouth of the chute alongside the track, as defendant's conductor testified was "perfectly practical" to keep persons from falling into the chute, especially when, as here, the night was dark and the defendant had no light there. The conductor testified that passengers were in the habit of getting on and off at that point, and that he took the money of those getting on. Such conduct amounted to an invitation to get off there, especially as the conductor did not warn the plaintiff. Johnson v. R. R.,
The court correctly charged, among other things: "If it had been the custom for a considerable time for persons in the neighborhood of the coal chute, wishing to become passengers on the outgoing trains of the defendant, to enter upon the same, when they stopped at the coal chute, without tickets, and to pay the fares in money, which were accepted by a conductor, without objection, and that it had also been the custom for them to leave the trains on their return, when the trains stopped at the said coal chute, and of which the agent of the defendant operating the said trains had notice, then the said passengers alighting from said train would have the license to be upon the lands of the (52) defendant; and if they and others had habitually used ways and paths across the lands of the defendant for the purpose of coming *51
to or going from such trains, then there would be a license for them to do so; but if these facts did not exist, then one getting off the trains at that point and going on the lands of the defendant would be a trespasser."Troy v. R. R.,
The jury found that the defendant was guilty of negligence, and that the plaintiff was not guilty of contributory negligence. There was evidence justifying the submission of these issues, and we find they were submitted under proper instructions from the court.
No error.