82 N.C. 352 | N.C. | 1880
The plaintiff brought this action to recover damages of the defendant company for alleged negligence in killing a mule, the property of plaintiff. The facts of the case are substantially set out in the opinion of this court. His Honor intimated that the defendant had rebutted the presumption of negligence, if the facts should be found as stated by the witnesses, and in deference thereto the plaintiff took a nonsuit and appealed. *353
The act of 1857 (Bat. Rev., ch. 16, § 11,) which makes the fact of killing prima facie evidence of negligence on the part of defendant, was intended as a protection to owners of cattle, and is in pursuance of the general policy of the state in regard to stock, which are allowed to run at large and are protected by various statutes and decisions. Rev. Code, ch. 38; Bat. Rev., ch. 16; Burgwyn v. Whitfield,
Messrs. D. J. Devane, Junius Davis and Stedman Lattimer, for defendant:
Notwithstanding the act of 1857, the plaintiff can no more recover in such case, when he has been guilty of contributory negligence, than he could before the passage of the act. Forbes' case, 76 N.C. at page 457. It was the duty of the court to say, if the witnesses were to be believed, whether or not the defendant was guilty of negligence. Doggett's case, 81 N.C. at page 462; Manly's,
No omitted duty on the part of the agents of the company in charge of the train is suggested, nor negligence in the employment of any available means by which the injury could have been avoided. The train was moving in its usual manner, the fireman with vigilance stimulated by the darkness of the night and consequent danger, is on the look out and discerns the obstruction the moment it becomes visible. The engineer is at his post and responds promptly to the first notice of its presence by shutting off stream and causing the brakes to be applied, and in a moment, before the whistle can be blown, the mule is stricken and killed. In the language of SETTLE, J., in a case not dissimilar, "what more could have been done? Nothing that we can see unless the road had been required to fence the track. Railroads are very properly held to a rigid accountability; but they are of great public benefit and should not be subject to such unreasonable restrictions, as would destroy or greatly impair their usefulness." Proctorv. R. R. Co.,
The responsibility of railroad companies for injuries to stock, straying upon their track, and the care and diligence required in the management of running trains, have frequently been before the court, and were fully discussed in Doggett v. R. R. Co.,
In the plaintiff's brief, it is intimated that the company should enclose its track with a fence, and the want of this is a negligence for which it is liable. Without adverting to the public inconvenience of having such obstructions at every highway crossing, and in the towns through which the track passes, it is sufficient to say that this is not required by law and hence the company is not in default in this regard. Nor do we think the company should abate its usual speed on account of the obscurity of the night, through the vigilance of its officers and agents should be quickened on such occasions, since the running of its trains out of schedule time is attended with greater perils and is fruitful of disasters.
There is no error and the judgment is affirmed.
No error. Affirmed. *356