48 S.E. 591 | N.C. | 1904
This is an action under The Code, sec. 1498, by the plaintiff, as administrator of his infant son, two and a half years old, who having wandered off without the knowledge of his parents was injured on the track of the defendant by its train so that the child died, and the plaintiff alleges this was by the negligence of the defendant.
The defendant, among other exceptions, excepted to a refusal to nonsuit at the close of the evidence, and asks us to overrule Russell v. SteamboatCo.,
The objection to the admission of photographs of the child just before its injury and also thereafter, but before its death, can not be sustained. Photographs frequently convey information *85
to the jury and the Court with an accuracy not permissible to spoken words, if their admission is properly guarded by inquiry as to the time and manner when taken. The admission of this species of evidence was, it is true, somewhat questioned (by a divided Court) when presented in this Court for the first time. Hampton v. R. R.,
Nor can we sustain the exception as to evidence of the distance within which the train could be stopped. Blue v. R. R.,
The real point in the case is in the refusal of the Court to submit the issue of contributory negligence upon the ground that negligence would not be imputed to the infant. This is true in an action in behalf of an infant.Bottoms v. R. R.,
Shearman Redfield Neg., sec. 78, also holds that the Vermont rule "is the true rule and is abundantly justified by the reasoning of the Courts which in more than twenty States have adopted it," among them Alabama, Arkansas, Connecticut Georgia, Illinois, Iowa, Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, North Carolina Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Vermont, the decisions of whose courts are cited. Also, 1 Fetter Carriers, sec. 199, p. 532. These authorities hold that "although a child or idiot or lunatic may have escaped into the highway through the fault or negligence of its keeper, and so be improperly there, yet if he is hurt by the negligence (119) of the defendant he is not barred of recovery. A greater degree of watchfulness is imposed on the other party, and what would be ordinary neglect in regard to one supposed to be of full age and capacity would be gross negligence as to a child or one known to be incapable of escaping danger. The child, so far as he is personally concerned, is held only to such degree of care as should be expected of a child of his age."
When, however, the parents are authorized, as in some States, to bring an action, their contributory negligence can then be pleaded. S. R. Neg., sec. 71; Williams v. R. R.,
Under our Code, sec. 1478, where there is no widow, nor child nor representative of a child, the estate of an intestate "shall be distributed equally to every next of kin who are in equal degree." The father and mother are of course "next of kin in equal degree." Under our former system under which the personalty of the wife became the property of the husband upon its receipt, of course the husband was sole distributee of an infant child dying unmarried and without children. The Constitution, Art. X, sec. 6, now provides that "All property, real and personal, to which she (a married woman) may, after marriage, become in any manner entitled, shall be and remain the sole and separate property of such female." This seems reasonably clear, and it may well be that the wife, jointly with the husband, is the beneficiary of the action brought by the administrator of an infant child in cases like this. We refrain from passing upon the point because it is not raised in this *88
record, but it may become pertinent in another trial. Interesting questions may arise where one parent is guilty of (121) contributory negligence and the other is not. This point is presented in Wolfe v. R. R.,
Of course, as in all other cases, the preliminary question to be decided is whether there was contributory negligence of one parent (or both), which was the proximate cause of the death, i. e., whether the defendant had or not the "last clear chance" to avoid killing the intestate. Pickett v. R.R.,
Error.
Cited: Duckworth v. Jordan,
(122)