76 N.C. 454 | N.C. | 1877
In order to remove that burden the defendant offered evidence tending to show that the mules of the plaintiff came upon the road suddenly at a place where they could not have been seen before they came upon it, and that the train was so near to them that it could not be stopped before it had killed them, although the servants on the train blew the alarm whistle and put down the brakes, and did everything in their power to stop it. This evidence, if believed, made out for the defendant a complete defence if nothing more had appeared.
But the plaintiff replies that the reason why the defendant could not stop his train was because the train was running at too high a rate of speed and that there was not a sufficient number of brakes upon it. And upon this question both sides offered evidence. The plaintiff's evidence tending to show that the train was running twenty odd miles an hour; and the defendant's, that it was only running twelve or thirteen miles an hour. There was no evidence as to the usual or necessary number of brakes for that train, nor was it left to the jury as a fact; but His Honor charged the jury as a matter of law that if the train was running at the usual speed of a freight train, then the number of brakes were sufficient and that there was no negligence; but if it was running at the speed of a mail train, then the number of brakes was not sufficient and that there was negligence.
In this we think there was error.
Our attention was not called to any statute regulating the speed of freight trains or mail trains, or the number of brakes to each. And we are not aware of any such statute. There is certainly no rule of the common law to that effect. The law is, that there must be a sufficient number of brakes to stop the train within a reasonable time and distance. And whether there was such a number in this case, was a question of fact. And whether that fact was to be tried by the Court or by the jury it was to be tried upon evidence. *457 And here there was no evidence to guide His Honor or the jury and none to guide us. If an expert had testified that the number of brakes on this train was not the usual and necessary number and that a greater number would have stopped the train before it struck the mules, then His Honor might have charged as a matter of law that there was negligence in not having the usual and necessary number of brakes, and in not stopping the train before it struck the mules. Or if an expert had testified that the speed was too high and that therefore it was not and could not have been stopped within reasonable time and space, His Honor might have charged that there was negligence. But there was no evidence of that kind.
The defendant insists further that the plaintiff's servants wantonly, or at least carelessly, drove his mules upon the defendant's road and were thereby guilty of contributory negligence. If the fact be so then it is a good defence.
Railroads are lawful and useful and while they must use care not to injure the citizen, the citizen must use care also. And he cannot complain if harm come to him by his own negligence.
The plaintiff however replies that he was driving his mules along a public road and that a bridge was down which it was the defendant's duty to keep up, and that on that account, his mules could not cross the defendant's road and escape as otherwise they would have done.
The facts in regard to this are not sufficiently stated to enable us to see how it was.
What we have already said will be sufficient to guide the next trial.
Error.
PER CURIAM. Venire de novo. *458