120 S.E. 827 | N.C. | 1924
Civil action to recover damages for alleged negligent killing of plaintiff's intestate. The facts in evidence tended to show that on the *148 morning of 11 January, 1921, about 10 o'clock, plaintiff's intestate, while walking along defendant's railroad track, several hundred feet beyond a crossing, was run over and killed by a train of defendant company, operated at the time by Vernon Rogers, a codefendant. There was evidence on part of plaintiff to the effect that the customary signals for the crossing of the public county road were not given, and also that the motorman at the time was not properly attentive to the conditions of the track ahead of his train.
There was much evidence on part of defendants in denial of this testimony of plaintiff and tending to show that the motorman was alert and attentive to his duties at the time, and that full crossing signals were given. But the jury have decided this against the defendant, and for the purposes of the disposition the Court makes of the case, plaintiff's evidence in this respect, in any event, must be accepted as true.
On denial of liability and plea of contributory negligence, etc., there was verdict for plaintiff assessing her damages, and defendants excepted and appealed, assigning errors, among others (1) the refusal of their motion to nonsuit; (2) the refusal to give defendants' prayer for instructions that if the jury should find the facts to be as testified to by witnesses, viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiff, they should answer the issues tending to fix liability for defendants, applying the prayer in terms to each of the said issues.
The decisions in this State have been very insistent upon the principle that a pedestrian voluntarily using a live railroad track as a walk-way for his own convenience is required at all times to look and to listen, and to take note of dangers that naturally threaten and which such action on his part would have disclosed, and if in breach of this duty and by reason of it he fails to avoid a train moving along the track and is run upon and killed or injured, his default will be imputed to him for contributory negligence and recovery is ordinarily barred. Wyrick v. R. R.,
In Wyrick's case, supra, it was said: "The intestate of the plaintiff was a school girl on her way to school with other girls on a dirt road alongside the defendant's right of way and, seeing the train approach, went upon the track in an intervening cut. The other children climbed *149 the side of the cut and avoided injury; but the intestate, while leaving the track for a place of safety, where there was sufficient room for the train to pass, caught her foot in a switch rod, and was struck by the locomotive and killed: Held, a motion as of nonsuit upon the evidence should have been allowed, upon the principle that the employees on defendant's train had the right to assume, up to the last moment, that the intestate, in full possession of her faculties, would leave the track and avoid the injury. In this case there was no evidence that the engineer was negligent or that he could have avoided the injury after seeing the intestate's peril."
In Neal's case it was said: "If plaintiff's intestate was walking upon defendant's road in open daylight on a straight piece of road where he could have seen defendant's train for 150 yards, and was run over and injured, he was guilty of negligence. And although the defendant may have also been guilty of negligence in running its train at a greater rate of speed than was allowed by the town ordinance, or in not ringing its bell as required by said ordinance, and in not keeping a lookout by its engineer as it should have done, yet the injury would be attributed to the negligence of the plaintiff's intestate."
In Exum's case, supra, it was said in the concurring opinion: "If it be conceded that the defendant in this case was negligent, I concur in the decision, for the reason that, accepting all of plaintiff's evidence as true, and taking every permissible inference arising on the entire testimony and which makes for his claim as established, it appears that when he was killed the intestate was voluntarily walking along the main line of defendant's track, at a time and place where a train might be expected any moment, in broad daylight, in the full possession of his faculties, and with nothing to restrain or hinder his movements, without paying the slightest attention either to his placing or surroundings. There is nothing, therefore, to qualify the obligation that was upon him to be careful of his own safety, and, to my mind, it presents a typical case of contributory negligence, negligence concurring at the very time of the impact, and recovery by plaintiff is therefore properly denied."
The position is modified in proper instances where the injury occurs at a crossing of a public road, and where the mutual rights and duties of the parties are at times of differing nature. Johnson v. R. R.,
Another qualification is presented when one is required to be on or upon the track in the line of his duties, particularly when being performed for the company. In such case and in exceptional instances the question of contributory negligence may be for the jury. See Sherrill v. R. R.,
And so, in Morrow v. R. R.,
Again, in Tally's case,
But none of these excepted cases will serve to support the present suit, wherein it appears that plaintiff, an alert and vigorous man, was, at the time and for his own convenience, using a track of defendant company as a walk-way at ten o'clock in the morning, with nothing whatever to obstruct his view, and on which a train of defendant might at any time be reasonably expected. In such case the claim comes directly within the decisions cited in support of the position generally prevailing, notably that of Exum'scase, and wherein it was said: "There is nothing to qualify the obligation that was upon him to be careful for his own safety, and presents a typical case of contributory negligence, negligence concurring at the very time of the impact."
Nor is there any evidence calling for or permitting the application of the doctrine of the "last clear chance," an issue that has been found for the plaintiff. That is a principle fully recognized in this jurisdiction, but in order to its proper application it must appear that the claimant, in a case of this kind, originally guilty of contributory negligence in going on the track, is down and helpless, or apparently in such a position of peril that ordinary effort on his part will not avail to save him. If defendant's agents operating a train saw, or by the exercise of proper care could have seen and noted, the claimant's position, and negligently failed in the exercise of reasonable care to do what was required under conditions presented to avert the injury, in such case this last breach of duty will be regarded as the sole proximate cause of the injury, and the original negligence of the claimant in going on the track will not be allowed to affect the result. Snipes v. Mfg. Co.,
In Sawyer's case the principle applicable is stated as follows: "A negligent act of the plaintiff does not become contributory unless the proximate cause of the injury, and, although the plaintiff, in going on the track, may have been negligent, when he was struck down and rendered unconscious by a bolt of lightning, his conduct as to what transpired after that time was no longer a factor in the occurrence, and, as all the negligence imputed to defendant on the first issue arose after plaintiff was down and helpless, the responsibility of defendant attached because it negligently failed to avail itself of the last clear chance to avoid the injury, so its negligence became the sole proximate cause of the injury; and the act of the plaintiff in going on the track, even though negligent in the first instance, became only the remote, and not the proximate or concurrent cause."
In Snipes' case the claimant, a fireman, was neither unconscious nor entirely helpless, but the engine had stopped and the engineer and *152 fireman went forward looking at the section hands repairing the track and a trestle. The fireman was sitting down on the ties with his feet and his legs partly hanging down between the ties of the trestle. The engineer, unobserved by the fireman, went back and started the engine without proper signal, and the fireman was run on and injured before he could extricate himself: Held, a case calling for the application of the doctrine of the last clear chance, and the opinion cites from Clark's and Bullock's cases as follows:
"In Bullock's case, Avery, J., for the Court, said: `It is the duty of an engineer, when running his engine, to keep a constant lookout for obstructions, and when an obstruction is discerned, no matter when or where, he should promptly resort to all means within his power, known to skillful engine drivers, to avert the threatened injury or danger. Woods' R. L., sec. 418, p. 1548; R. R. v. Williams,
"And in Clark's case, supra, the Court said: `It is settled law in this State that where an engineer sees that a human being is on the track at a point where he can step off at his pleasure and without delay, he can assume that he is in full possession of his senses and faculties, without information to the contrary, and will step aside before the engine can overtake him. But where it is apparent to an engineer, who is keeping a proper lookout, that a man is lying prone upon the track, or his team is delayed in moving a wagon over a crossing, it has been declared that the engineer, having reason to believe that life or property will be imperiled by going on without diminishing his speed, is negligent if he fails to use all the means at his command, consistent with the safety of the passengers and property in his charge, to stop his train and avoid coming in contact with the person so exposed,' citing Deans v. R. R.,
But in the present case there is nothing to show that the intestate was in any way hindered or that there was anything to prevent his avoiding the collision if he had been properly attentive to the threatening conditions in which he had placed himself. And the facts which establish contributory negligence coming from plaintiff's own evidence, and there being nothing to the contrary shown anywhere in the record, it is in accord with our practice that a motion for nonsuit may be entertained and allowed. Speaking to the question in the recent case of S. v. Fulcher,
In the case of Lapish v. Director General, supra, as heretofore stated, the injury was treated as virtually occurring at a public crossing, and some of the facts affecting the issue were in dispute.
On the record, we are of opinion that there was error in denying defendant's motion to nonsuit, and this will be certified that the verdict and judgment be set aside and the case nonsuited.
Reversed.