56 S.E. 945 | N.C. | 1907
The plaintiff, Susan Crenshaw, brought this action to recover damages for injuries she received and which were caused, as she alleges, by the negligence of the defendant. At the time of the occurrence she lived on the east side of Bailey Street, in the city of Asheville. The track of the defendant's railway is laid on that street, which at and for some distance on either side of the place of the accident runs north and south. The feme plaintiff, on 7 August, 1901, and late in the afternoon of that day, had gone from her home, across the track of the defendant, and to the opposite, or west, side of Bailey Street to buy apples from one Bryson, who was selling them from a wagon drawn by a mule which was headed toward the north. While Mrs. Crenshaw was standing at the rear of the wagon, making her purchase, one of the defendant's cars, proceeding south, came in sight. The mule was frightened and became unruly. He backed the wagon against the plaintiff, who retreated down *220 (316) the street. She then turned and signaled the motorman by throwing up her hand, but did not pay any attention to the car after that time. The evidence tended to show that the car was running at a moderate rate of speed. The motorman had slackened the speed by applying the brakes, and when Bryson had taken hold the reins and started up the street with the mule, and just before the car passed the plaintiff, he released the brakes. The plaintiff was then about 12 feet from the track, directly out, and the car was from 14 to 18 feet north of a point on the track immediately opposite where the plaintiff was at the time. The mule was then under the control of its driver. If the brakes had not been released the car could have been stopped within 6 or 8 feet. The car was running slowly all the time at that place, about as fast as a man can walk. The plaintiffs' witness, Bryson, testified, in substance, that the feme plaintiff was on the west side of the street, at the rear end of his wagon; the car came down the street and the mule began to back as if it would run the wagon into the car, and the lady ran down the street; that she had gone from 16 to 20 feet, when he got the mule straightened back and started up the street. The mule had backed the wagon from the west side toward the east side of the street, and close to the car as it was passing, something like 2 feet, or 18 inches from the car as it passed the wagon; and at this time, when the car was closest to the wagon, he was between the wagon and the car, and the plaintiff was from 16 to 20 feet from the wagon and down the street near the west sidewalk, on the west side of the passing car; and that she was in that position the last time he saw her.
The plaintiff's witness, Kosky, testified that when the mule began to back the wagon the plaintiff ran down the street on the west side, and then across the street toward the east, and struck the car near the front right-hand corner.
(317) The evidence further tended to show that the collision with the car caused the feme plaintiff to fall, and the wheels on one side passed over her feet. The injury was received on the west rail of the track, 36 to 40 feet from the point where the plaintiff was at the wagon when the mule began to move.
The defendant's testimony was to the effect that, as the car approached, the mule showed signs of restiveness, and turned somewhat toward the west sidewalk; the motorman then had his car under control, and the plaintiff was 12 or 15 feet from the car track and near the rear end of the wagon; about the time the car was passing the mule and wagon, the plaintiff started down the street on the west side, near the curbing, and after having gone some distance she stopped a moment and then turned and ran diagonally across the street toward the car track, where she collided with the side of the car, just back of the front steps, was *221 knocked down and injured. The motorman testified that he did not see the plaintiff after he passed the wagon until after she ran into the side of the car and was falling. When he passed her she was standing 12 feet from the car, and, seeing that everything was all right, he looked ahead and did not see the plaintiff again until a lady screamed and attracted his attention. He then looked around and saw her falling. He also stated that it was 4 or 5 feet from where he was standing on the front platform to the point where she struck the car. The evidence further tended to show that the street at the place where the accident occurred was 26 feet wide between the curbs; the railway track, which was laid on the east side of the street, about 1 1/2 feet from the east curbing, was about 5 feet wide, and the car projected over the track about 1 foot at the widest point. The evidence also tended to show that the plaintiff was in no actual danger after she moved away from the wagon and started to run, either diagonally across or straight down on the west side and then diagonally across the street toward the (318) car, where she was injured.
Mrs. Fisher testified: "I saw the car coming down the street, about Mr. Heston's house; as it got a very little closer, the mule began to shy at something or to throw up his head and shy a little. The man stepped around the side of the wagon and took hold of the bridle. By that time the car was very close to them. He had slowed up some, was not running fast, and Mrs. Crenshaw started to leave the wagon. She turned from the wagon and went down the street almost opposite to my father's gate. I thought she was coming into my lot, and when I saw she turned toward the car I screamed, but before I could attract her attention she had reached the car, and the handle on the body of the car, back of the platform, struck her left shoulder and threw her back from the car, and she struck on her right side." She further stated, in substance, that the plaintiff was running with her head down, and just as she reached the car she slowed up and threw up her hands and said, "Oh, God!" and at that moment the car struck her and she fell on the ground. When she turned, near the gate, she went rather diagonally toward the car, or southeast. At the time she turned suddenly she was the width of the street from the car (about 15 feet), and the car was then about opposite to her. The witness screamed when the plaintiff turned and started toward the car, but she reached the car before the witness could attract her attention. The evidence tended to show that the plaintiff was very much frightened as she left the wagon and went down the street.
The defendant, in apt time, moved, under the statute, to dismiss the action. The motion was overruled, and the defendant excepted. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff, and judgment having been entered thereon, the defendant appealed. *222
After stating the case: The counsel for the defendant abandoned all assignments of error except those which raised the question whether, upon the evidence construed most favorably for her, the plaintiff is entitled to recover. The testimony is voluminous, and we have held the case over from the last term in order that we might give it a most careful examination. There are few conflicts in it, and they are slight and not very material. When every disputed question of fact is resolved in favor of the plaintiff, it does not seem to us that she has made out a case. Indeed, it is clear to us that she has not, whether we consider the facts with reference to any omission of duty on the part of the defendant or with regard to her own negligence as the efficient and proximate cause of the injuries received. No fault is imputed to the motorman in the management of his car up to the time that the plaintiff left the wagon and was apparently out of danger from any apprehended conduct of the mule. Indeed, all of the evidence shows, and the case was argued upon that theory here, that the motorman had slowed down by shutting off the power and applying the brakes, so that he had the car completely under his control, and the speed had been so reduced that it was moving very slowly as the point of danger, from the backing of the mule, was being passed. He acted promptly, and showed every disposition to avoid an accident. Nor do we find any evidence in the case which tends to show that he relaxed his efforts in this respect at any time before the plaintiff was injured. We are not permitted to decide upon mere conjecture or to guess how or by what combination of circumstances an injury may have been caused by the defendant's negligence. The burden is always on the plaintiff to show by a preponderance (320) of the evidence that the defendant committed a negligent act and that it was the proximate cause of the injury. The two facts must coexist and be established by the clear weight of the evidence before a case of actionable negligence is made out. Brewster v.Elizabeth City,
There is no evidence, therefore, from which any inference can fairly or reasonably drawn — not even a scintilla of proof — that the plaintiff was so situated and circumstanced that she could not have heard and seen the car, or that she could not have looked or listened. We make an extract from her own testimony in this connection, so as to see what is her version of the facts:
"Q. I believe, on your previous examination, you said something like this, did you not? You stated that when the man first mentioned the car, you looked up and saw it was coming about halfway (324) between the Heston house and Redwood's house? A. Yes.
"Q. You answered that, `Yes'; is that the way you recollect it now? A. Yes.
"Q. Listen to this: `About how near was that from you?' You answered, `I don't know. I cannot estimate the distance. I failed to say that when I got out and threw up my hand and the car was coming along about Mr. Redwood's place, it came just over me in a flash that this mule was going to act badly; I must get away before the car gets there.' Do you remember that? A. Yes.
"Q. Do you remember this? `So I got out of the way of the wagon, and the first thing I did was to throw up my hands.' A. Yes.
"Q. Is that correct? A. What did you say?
"Q. `So I got out of the way of the wagon, and the first thing I did was to throw up my hands.' Do you remember that? A. Yes.
"Q. Is that the way you remember it now? A. Yes.
"Q. You were out of the way of the wagon at that time? A. I was out after I moved on, but I wouldn't have been had I stayed still, for it was backing toward me. That is what caused me to move — because it was coming."
And again:
"Q. You do not mean to say that you were crossing the track at the time the car struck you? A. Of course, I did not mean that.
"Q. The complaint is inaccurate when it purports to give your statement that you were crossing the track? A. Yes."
But if it be conceded that there was any negligence in running the car, it cannot be successfully denied that the plaintiff was plainly guilty of such concurring negligence on her part, up to the very moment *226 (325) of the accident, as to bar her recovery. Indeed, she had the last clear chance for saving herself from harm, and failed to avail herself of it, and she thus became, in the eye of the law, the responsible author of her injury, her negligent act being regarded as its proximate cause. This case is much stronger in favor of the defendant than those we have cited above from our own reports, as in them it appeared that the plaintiff, who was injured, was at the time on the track, while here the plaintiff was not on the track, but walked into the side of the car.
Speaking of the rights of foot passengers on streets, and the duty to use their powers of observation when approaching vehicles or street railways, the Court, in R. R. v. Block,
As much as we deplore the unfortunate accident which has befallen the plaintiff, we are not permitted to relax those rules of the law which must be applied inflexibly and impartially to all cases coming within the principles they have established. "It is impossible," said a learned and a just judge, "to consider the plaintiff's injuries without a feeling of profound sympathy. His misfortune was a severe one, but sympathy, although one of the noblest sentiments of our nature, which brings its reward to both the subject and the actor, has no proper place in the administration of the law. It is properly based upon moral or charitable considerations alone, and neither courts nor juries are justified in yielding to its influence in the discharge of their important and responsible duties. If permitted to make it the basis of transferring the property of one party to another, great injustice would be done, the foundation of the law disturbed, and anarchy result. Hence, every proper consideration requires us to disregard our sympathy and decide the questions of law presented according to the well-settled rules governing them." Laidlaw v. Sage, 158 N. Y., at p. 104. The true function of judge and jury could not be better stated.
Street railway companies should be held to a strict accountability for the management of their cars and for the performance of their duty to the public which they serve. The care and vigilance required of them should be proportioned to the increased danger and hazard which the nature of their business creates; but while they are, and properly should be, thus answerable, under the law, for any breach of duty, we should not forget that they are also equally under its protection, and should not be made to pay when nothing is due. (328) *228
The court erred in refusing to nonsuit the plaintiff. We must therefore reverse its judgment and direct, in accordance with the statute, that the action be dismissed.
Reversed.
Cited: Boney v. R. R.,