13 S.E. 884 | N.C. | 1891
The facts are stated in the opinion.
In the absence of statutes regulating the time and manner of giving signals, the failure of an engineer in charge of a locomotive to ring the bell or sound the whistle on approaching the crossing of a public highway, or a point where the public have been habitually permitted to cross, as at the intersection of a mill road or a farm road frequently used, is evidence of negligence to be submitted to the jury. 2 Shearman and Red. on Neg., secs. 463 and 464; Warner v. R. R.,
It is negligence per se, because of the peril both to passengers on trains and people using highways, to omit to give in reasonable time some signal from a train moving, whether at the rate of twenty or forty miles an hour, when it is hidden from the view of travelers, who may be approaching and in danger of coming in collision with it, by the cars of the company left standing on its track, or by an embankment, a cut or a sharp curve in its line, or by any other obstruction allowed to be placed or placed in any way by the company. Randall v. R. R.,
Where a railroad company has erected a whistle-post at a proper distance from a crossing in order to notify engineers when to give timely warning of the approach of a train to persons using the intersecting highway, and the purpose of the company is known to the public so that persons generally are led to act on the supposition that (474) a signal will be given at the post, it is negligence on the part of the company if the engineer fail to sound the whistle at the point so indicated in passing with a freight or passenger train in his charge. *344
2 Woods R. R., p. 1313; Spencer v. R. R.,
Where a jury find that the injured person would not have ventured upon the track at such a crossing, and would have incurred no risk of a collision with the train, but for the negligence of the engineer in failing to give timely warning of its approach, the corporation is liable to answer in damages, though the plaintiff may have been careless in exposing himself to danger. Deans v. R. R.,
In Randall v. R. R., supra, the judge who tried the case below charged the jury, in effect, that if the engineer failed, in passing around a sharp curve, caused by a projecting cliff or mountain, to give the usual signal of approach to a crossing just beyond the curve, from which his train was not visible, the corporation was liable for injury to a team of oxen that were being driven along a parallel road beside the track and near said crossing, if, as the testimony tended to show, the owner would have driven them to a point more remote from the railroad and where they would have been free from danger, had he heard the expected warning at the usual place. There was a conflict of testimony in that as in our case. The engineer testified that he blew at the usual point for the crossing, not far from the place where the animals were killed, while other witnesses contradicted this statement. Kinney, the engineer in the case at bar, testified that he blew at a post erected below Linwood Station, which he located 342 1/2 yards south of that depot; that he passed the station going north without stopping, and blew again at the proper point to warn persons passing over the crossing of the (475) Lexington road, which is 231 yards north of Linwood, but that he gave no other warning after passing that signal-post till he struck the horse attached to the covered wagon in which the plaintiff and his father were riding, at the crossing of the mill road, 652 yards north of the intersection with the Lexington road. It is admitted that there was a signal-post erected on the west side of the track, or on the left of the engineer going north, at a distance of 208 yards south of the mill road crossing and 444 yards north of the crossing of the Lexington road.
Three witnesses for the plaintiff testified positively that the engineer blew the whistle at a bridge about a half-mile south of Linwood, and far south of the first whistle-post on his right, and did not blow again till the plaintiff was injured. Another witness, who lived in sixty or seventy yards of Linwood, stated that he did not hear any whistle after that given at the bridge.
Conceding, for the sake of the argument, that the signal-post on the left (208 yards from the mill road crossing) was intended for trains *345 moving south, and that the custom was to blow opposite to it to give notice of the approach of trains moving south to travelers on the Lexington road, we think that the judge below was not in error in telling the jury that a traveler had the right to rely on hearing the usual signal at posts known by the public to have been erected to indicate to engineers the point for blowing the whistle as a warning of the approach of a train. According to the testimony offered for the plaintiff, the engineer failed to blow at the lower post (where he admits he ought to have given a signal, and says that he did), or below the Lexington road crossing, while the engineer testifies to the contrary. In Randallv. R. R., supra, it was the station-blow that the jury found that the engineer had failed to give and plaintiff was near, not at, a crossing, and about 100 yards from the station, when his oxen jumped upon the track and were killed; yet if he had heard the usual station-blow at the point where he had a right to expect it, he would have moved (476) his cattle out of danger, and thereby avoided the accident.
But counsel pressed with much earnestness and ingenuity the more sweeping and general exception, growing out of the tenth paragraph of his prayer for instructions, that there was no evidence of negligence on the part of defendant company. Not only was the court justified by the testimony tending to show the failure to sound the whistle at the lower post, in refusing to give this instruction, but the jury should have been left to determine (looking at every aspect of the testimony and the inferences to be drawn from it) whether the engineer blew the whistle before reaching the Lexington road, and whether his admitted failure, at the proper distance from the mill road crossing, to repeat the warning, was the proximate cause of the injury; for if, by giving a signal at either place where defendant had a right to expect it, the accident would have been avoided, then such omission was the immediate cause of the injury, and the plaintiff was entitled to recover, though he may have shown a want of care in going upon the track. Lay v. R. R.,
The jury found, in response to the first issue, that the plaintiff was injured by the negligence of the defendant company, and in answer to the second issue, that the plaintiff did not contribute to cause the injuries by his own negligence. *346
It was the duty of the plaintiff to look and listen before going (477) upon the track, although it may not have been the hour when a regular train was expected. Randall v. R. R., supra. "He is only bound to look, when to do so would aid him in determining whether a train is approaching. In all other respects he has a right to rely uponhis ears. But when the proper signals are given, if a traveler ventures upon the track, and miscalculates as to the chances of crossing, the riskis his, unless some negligence can be imputed to the company which hasdirectly caused the injury." 2 Wood R. R., p. 1310, sec. 343, and note 2 (ib., p. 1312, and note 1). Kenney v. R. R., supra.
The court instructed the jury upon this subject as follows: "It was the duty of the plaintiff to keep a proper lookout as well as the engineer, and one time looking and listening at a distance from the track is not a proper lookout. He ought to have used his senses of sight and hearing all the time, and if he failed to do so, and thereby caused his injury, the answer to the second issue should be `Yes.'" If the court had, in compliance with the defendant's request, told the jury that it was "the duty of the plaintiff to see and hear," and his failure to do so was equivalent to not looking or listening at all, the instruction would unquestionably have been erroneous, and subject to well grounded exception on the part of the plaintiff. It is manifest that the court had no right, where there was conflicting testimony, and more than one inference deducible from the evidence, to instruct the jury that they must find, in any aspect of the case, that the plaintiff, by his own negligence, contributed to bringing about the collision, much less that the negligence of the plaintiff was the direct cause of the injury. The plaintiff testified that he and his father (who is his next friend as plaintiff) started from the house of his brother, the witness A. A. Hinkle, near the Lexington road, in a covered wagon, and, as they traveled along the road, he looked (478) out of the wagon two or three times to see if a train was coming, and that when they had gone down the hill, within about twenty yards of the crossing, he stopped the wagon and listened. The plaintiff then got out on the cross-pieces of the shaft and held to the wagon with one hand while he rested the other on the horse's rump, and, as his father drove on, looked and listened, but neither heard nor saw an approaching train till the horse got upon the track, when he had but time to utter an exclamation and fell back into the wagon with his father before they were stricken and carried or thrown about seventy-five feet and were left in an insensible state by the train. It will be observed that the boy, if he is to be believed, looked and listened, and neither saw nor heard anything. The judge had no right to tell the jury that because the engineer, however respectable or intelligent, testified to the height of the banks along the cut, and introduced a map to corroborate his *347 opinion that a train on the track, anywhere north of Linwood and south of the mill road crossing, was visible to a person passing along the road traveled by plaintiff from his brother's house to the crossing, they must disregard the plaintiff's statement, and answer the second issue "Yes." It was the province of the jury to determine whether the plaintiff did, in fact, after stopping and listening at the foot of the hill, ride sixty feet, looking and listening still, but in vain, from the shaft all the way, for a train that could not be seen till the horse was upon the track, and to say whether it was possible for him to see the approaching train or hear the noise, in the absence of signals, as it moved up-grade from the station. In such a conflict the court could not instruct the jury as to the weight of the testimony. Although the engineer may have failed to give the usual signals south of the depot or of either of the crossings, it was the duty of the plaintiff to look and listen before going upon the track, and he testified that he did. The jury were warranted by the testimony, therefore, in finding that he used ordinary care to guard against accident before attempting to cross. His father, (479) according to the evidence, was deaf, and was compelled to rely upon the hearing of the plaintiff, a boy of fourteen. It was not the duty of the plaintiff, if, after listening at twenty yards distance and riding on the shaft he neither heard nor saw an approaching train, to get down and look up and down the track, even though his view of the railroad line was obstructed. R. R. v. Ackerman, 74 Pa. St., 265.
It was not error in the court to give the jury the instruction as to the duty of the engineer to keep a vigilant outlook, which is the subject of exception. It was not contended that the proposition embodied in the instruction given was not a correct statement of the law, but that it was inapplicable to the facts, and calculated to mislead the jury. There was some evidence that counsel had a right to comment upon and to have submitted to the jury, as tending to show that after the engineer saw, or could, by keeping a proper lookout, have seen the plaintiff's horse stepping upon the track, he might have stopped his train altogether before reaching the crossing, or have so lowered its speed as to strike with little force and diminish the chances of serious injury to the inmates of the wagon, who were thrown seventy-five feet by the violent concussion.
The expert witness Rutherford, who was introduced for the defendant, testified that the engineer might have seen a man on his left within nine or ten feet of the track, on the mill road, when the engine was three hundred feet from the crossing, and that he could have seen a horse six feet from the track 1,000 feet from the crossing, and could have stopped his engine within 500 feet. If the engineer could have seen, or saw, the horse and was unable to tell whether he was harnessed, and he *348
seemed to be approaching the track, it was his duty to slacken speed.Snowden v. R. R.,
The court below permitted the plaintiff to show by a witness that soon after the accident the defendant company repaired the crossing at the mill road so as to make it less difficult to get upon the track. The defendant objected then, and assigns as error now the admission of the testimony. The court assigned as a reason for the ruling, that it was competent to show in this way that the defendant knew of the existence of the crossing and treated it as a public crossing, or one that the corporation was under obligations to keep in repair. Although the (481) road may have been used as a mill road, it may also, as a plantation road, have come within the requirement of section 1975 of The Code, which fact would have made it the duty of the company to keep it repaired. At that stage of the trial it is not difficult to see that it might become material for the jury to know whether such duty was imposed upon the defendant by law, especially if, in the further progress of the trial, it should appear that the engineer, by keeping a proper outlook, might have had reason to believe that the plaintiff's wagon was impeded by some defect in crossing. Bullock v. R. R.,
The judge below had, unquestionably, the right, in the exercise of his discretion, to refuse the motion for a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence in any case. Carson v. Dellinger,
Affirmed.
Cited: Blackwell v. R. R.,