93 S.E. 932 | S.C. | 1917
October 18, 1917. The opinion of the Court was delivered by The case shows:
"This action was brought by the plaintiff, C.A. Dobbins, against the defendant, Seaboard Air Line Railroad Company, in the Court of Common Pleas for York county, and the plaintiff demanded twenty thousand ($20,000) dollars damages from the defendant. On the night of October 11, 1915, about 8 o'clock, or a little thereafter, the plaintiff was returning from Winnsboro to Rock Hill in an automobile, and when he was near where the Saluda road, leading from Chester to Rock Hill, crossed the main line of Seaboard Air Line Railway, a short distance from the city limits of the city of Chester, his car left the road and got into a ditch on the right-hand side of the road, and the car was partially overturned. When it was afterwards found, the two right wheels of the car were down in the ditch, and the two left wheels were on the edge of the road. In some way the right leg of the plaintiff was caught and his leg was fractured, sustaining a compound fracture. The point where the car *256 went into the ditch and where, together with the plaintiff, it was found after the accident, was somewhere from 10 to 30 feet from the railroad crossing according to the testimony of various witnesses. The plaintiff testified that, when some distance from the crossing, being aware of the fact that he was approaching the crossing, he slackened the speed of his car and looked to see if any trains were approaching. Seeing no trains, he put on speed, and when near the crossing he discovered the approaching of cars on the track. He put on brakes, cut off his engine, and then his car went into the ditch on the right-hand side of the road. It was not alleged in the complaint, and there was no testimony going to show, that there was any actual collision of the train and automobile in which the plaintiff was riding, nor was the plaintiff struck by the train; the undisputed testimony showing that the automobile went into the ditch from 10 to 30 feet before reaching the railroad crossing, and plaintiff was injured at that point."
The specifications of negligence were, so far as they affect this case: (a) Failure to give signals of the approach of the train. (b) Failure to make a safe approach to its crossing. (c) Failure to have proper lights on its engine. (d) Failure to keep a lookout for people on the public highway. There are 17 exceptions, but they may be grouped to raise four questions.
1. In the charge of the trial Judge he read section 602 of the Criminal Code. Section 602 prescribes a speed not to exceed six miles an hour "upon approaching a crossing of intersecting public highways." Unless the intersection of a public highway and a railroad is an intersection of public highways, then the charge was irrelevant and misleading. The statute is a criminal statute and must be strictly construed. A railroad is a quasi public highway, and not within the prohibition of the statute. The exceptions that raise this question are sustained.
2. The next assignment of error is that his Honor held *257 that the allegations and proof in this case did not bring this case within section 3230, vol. I, Code of Laws of South Carolina. That section provides that if a person is injured at a public crossing, by a collision with the engines or cars, contributory negligence, consisting of "a mere want of ordinary care," is not a defense, but the defendant must show gross or wilful negligence of the person injured, or that he was acting in violation of the law. The trial Judge held that, unless there was an actual collision, the statute does not apply. The statute requires actual collision, and this exception is overruled. We have been cited to no authority, and we know of none, that holds that the fact of injury at a crossing raises the presumption that no signals were given, or that the defendant was negligent.
The third allegation of error is that the trial Judge held that the defendant was liable only for defects on the roadbed, and was not liable for defective approaches to a crossing. The trial Judge said that he would not have so held, except for the case of Felder v. Railway,
His Honor correctly charged that the rule as to sudden peril does not apply to one who, by his own fault, had brought about the sudden danger. The exceptions that raise this question are overruled.
The judgment is reversed, and a new trial ordered.