57 S.E. 209 | N.C. | 1907
The plaintiff was thrown and injured by his mule slipping and falling while plaintiff was driving him across the defendant's track at Gardner's Crossing, a flag station on defendant's road. The defendant had always kept up this crossing from the time the road was built by having planks nailed down between the rails and a plank on the outside of each rail. But a few weeks before this injury the defendant, in working its track, had torn up these planks and had not put them *393 back. There was evidence from which the jury could have found that if the crossing had been restored to its former condition the slipping of the mule would not have happened, and that the plaintiff would not have been thrown and injured but for the dangerous condition in which the crossing was left after this working of the defendant's road, by reason of the fresh dirt thrown up and the absence of planks. This being a nonsuit, the evidence must be taken in the most (570) favorable light for the plaintiff.
The road the plaintiff was traveling was not a public highway, but a neighborhood road, traveled by the people of that neighborhood as a mill and church road, and had been so used for "probably one hundred years." It was also used by them in going to Marion, the county-seat, and connected two public roads which were three miles apart. The crossing was, as has been said, a flag station. The chief contention of the defendant is that this was not a public road, and hence it was not the duty of the railroad company to keep the crossing in a safe condition. Revisal, sec. 2567 (5), requires railroads to keep the crossing of "any street, highway, plank road, and turnpike" in such condition "as not unnecessarily to impair its usefulness." Section 2569 requires railroads in crossing "established roads or ways" to so construct its works as "not to impede the passage or transportation of persons or property along the same."
In Roper v. R. R.,
It is just that the crossings necessitated by the construction and operation of a railroad should be kept in a safe condition by it. The power of the Legislature to impose upon the railroad company the duty of making and keeping in repair all crossings is unquestionable. In Massachusetts, Connecticut, and to some extent in other States, railroads are now required by statute to change their grades so as to pass under or over all crossings and to make the change entirely at their own expense. These statutes have been held constitutional both by the courts of their own State (see cases cited, Cooper v. R. R.,
Indeed, the crossing being upon the defendant's right of way, (572) neither the plaintiff nor any one else could enter there to keep it in condition. That might have been unsafe for passing trains. Only the defendant could be expected or permitted to work on the crossing. The defendant itself had recognized that it was its duty to keep this crossing in repair, and had done so till but a few weeks before this, when the company had torn it up in repairing its own road and had failed to again put the crossing in its former state. Whether this new condition was negligence, and was the proximate cause of the injury, and whether the plaintiff's negligence contributed to the injury or whether the injury was purely accidental, without fault of any one, are matters which should have been submitted to the jury. The burden of proving contributory negligence is upon the defendant, who has pleaded it in his answer. Revisal, sec. 483. The nonsuit is set aside and
Reversed.
Cited: Herndon v. R. R.,