17 S.E.2d 137 | N.C. | 1941
Civil action to recover for personal injuries and property damage alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant.
The record discloses that on 27 April, 1940, the plaintiff and her niece were riding in plaintiff's Chevrolet sedan when it was struck by defendant's train at a street crossing in the town of Dunn, resulting in serious personal injuries to the plaintiff and damage to her automobile.
The plaintiff lives at the corner of West Divine Street and Railroad Avenue, within a very short distance of the crossing where the accident occurred. Divine Street crosses the railroad tracks at right angles, and Railroad Avenue runs parallel to the tracks and between plaintiff's residence and the railroad. Plaintiff was familiar with the train schedules and knew the regular northbound fast passenger train No. 80 ran through the town every day about noon. She is 45 years of age and has lived there for more than ten years. Approaching the Divine Street triple-track-crossing from the west in the direction plaintiff was coming and looking from the "stop sign" erected by the railroad to the south, the direction in which the train was coming, the view is clear for a distance of a block and a half. In this second block are two section houses and a water tank on defendant's right of way, which obstructed plaintiff's view beyond the first section house. This first section house is 350 feet according to plaintiff's evidence, and by actual measurement, 446 feet from the south side of Divine Street. The water tank is 815 feet from Divine Street.
Plaintiff testified that when she got to the "stop sign," she stopped, looked to the south "and the coast was clear and I didn't see any train whatever." She then "pulled up nearly to the crossing" so that she could see past the warehouse on her left "and looked back to the right and I didn't see any train," didn't hear any bell or whistle signal, "and I proceeded on slowly and approached the track as slow as I could, and when I got on the track or just about across, the train came steaming around . . . at a terrific rate of speed, 45 or 50 miles an hour. . . . It was right on me before I knew it . . . before I had time to do anything. . . . The train was almost to the switch when I first saw it. . . . The engine was in about 20 feet. . . . There was a crash and that is the last I knew." (Cross-examination): "At the time of the accident, it was broad open daylight, about noon. . . . I knew train No. 80 ran through there every day about that time. . . . It was a clear, sunny day. . . . I did hear the whistle blow but it was right on me, just a short distance from me when it blew. . . . I could not have heard the noise two blocks away. . . . I have been driving an automobile about 14 years. . . . From the point where I stopped the second time, you cannot see as far as the water tank. . . . I stopped my car about 9 feet from the (spur) track. . . . I drove about 20 feet, while the train went at least 350 feet." *284 Plaintiff's witness, O. R. Pearce, testified that it is "about 24 feet from the west rail of the spur track to the west rail of the northbound track. Continuing east from the spur track, when you get to the next railroad track, which is the southbound track, and look to your right you will have a straight angle then from every way and you can see as far as you can look. Looking from any point on the extreme west of the right of way until one gets past the southbound track and between the southbound track and the northbound track, a person can see a train just as far as they can see, looking either north or south. After you get on the spur track, a person going east across the Divine Street crossing and until the time they got on the northbound track on which No. 80 was running on the 27th day of April, 1940, could have seen a train down the south any way you looked at any of the crossings. This applies to any of the crossings in the town of Dunn."
The engineer testified that he had just passed Main Street crossing and Pearsall Street crossing in the town of Dunn, and as he approached Divine Street crossing he had slowed down to 20 or 25 miles an hour, with the engine bell ringing; that he stopped after the accident in about three car lengths; that the bell was then ringing, and that had he been running 45 to 50 miles an hour he could not have stopped in so short a distance.
These central facts were amplified by other witnesses and additional testimony, and there was evidence from the defendant in contradiction of plaintiff's testimony, but the foregoing will suffice for the disposition which we think must be made of the case.
The defendant demurred to the evidence and asked for a directed verdict on the issue of contributory negligence. Both requests were denied. Exceptions.
The usual issues of negligence, contributory negligence, and damages were submitted to the jury and answered in favor of the plaintiff. From judgment thereon, the defendant appeals, assigning errors.
The question for decision is whether the plaintiff's contributory negligence is such as to bar a recovery. The pertinent authorities would seem to suggest an affirmative answer. Temple v. Hawkins, ante, 26; Hamptonv. Hawkins,
It is the prevailing and permissible rule of practice to enter judgment of nonsuit in a negligence case, when it appears from the evidence offered on behalf of the plaintiff that his own negligence was the proximate cause of the injury, or one of them. Battle v. Cleave,
The reason the defendant's evidence is not to be considered on a motion of this kind, unless favorable to the plaintiff and except for explanatory purposes when not in conflict with plaintiff's evidence, Harrison v. R. R.,
The reciprocal duties and obligations of trainmen and travelers on approaching a public crossing were considered in Moore v. R. R., *286
In the application of this rule it is recognized that "a railroad crossing is itself a notice of danger, and all persons approaching it are bound to exercise care and prudence, and when the conditions are such that a diligent use of the senses would have avoided the injury, a failure to use them constitutes contributory negligence and will be so declared by the court." Coleman v. R. R., supra; Carruthers v. R. R.,
The same rule was declared in Johnson v. R. R.,
In actions involving negligence and contributory negligence, it is often difficult to determine whether the case is one for the jury or one exclusively for the court. Meacham v. R. R.,
The case lends itself to much writing, but in the end it all comes to this: Plaintiff testifies that she was familiar with the crossing; that she knew the schedule of defendant's trains; that she stopped the second time about nine feet from the spur track, looked in the direction the train was coming and did not see it — not that she could not see it, but that she did not see it — and then proceeded slowly towards the crossing without seeing or hearing the train until "it was right on me." It thus appears, from her own testimony, that she started her car and drove a distance of at least 20 feet across two tracks and onto a third in front of an on-coming train which she knew was due to pass about that time and which she should have seen in the exercise of reasonable care. This was negligence on her part which contributed to the injury. Tart v. R. R.,
It results, therefore, that the motion for judgment of nonsuit should have been allowed.
Reversed.