74 S.E. 577 | N.C. | 1912
The facts are sufficiently stated in the opinion of the Court by MR. CHIEF JUSTICE CLARK. This was an action for wrongful death. The plaintiff appealed from a judgment of nonsuit. The evidence tended to prove that plaintiff's intestate was killed shortly after 9 o'clock at night in the corporate limits of Durham, and his body was found lying on the east side of the defendant's track, partly on the ends of the cross-ties and with his skull fractured. He was unconscious when found, and died soon after. The defendant's passenger train from Lynchburg passed about 9 o'clock, running about 30 miles an hour, which was greatly in excess of the speed limit (8 miles) permitted by the ordinances of the city. The railroad track was down grade and curved to left going into Durham, but the sharpest part of the curve was some distance beyond where the body of the deceased was found. The skull was fractured just above the left ear. The railroad track had been used for many years by the public generally as a walkway, and especially by the operatives in the mill going and returning from work. The place was in the city limits and in a populous community. A man lying on the track or sitting on the end of a cross-tie at the point where the plaintiff's body was found could be seen under the headlight of the engine 125 yards and the defendant's train that night could have been stopped *37 within that distance from the spot, if running at the rate of not over 8 miles per hour, the speed allowed by the ordinance. The evidence for the plaintiff showed that, though there is a street crossing a short distance south of the spot where the body was found, no bell was rung or whistle sounded; that the place was within the corporate limits, and the train was moving about 30 miles an hour.
The defendant's answer, which was offered in evidence, averred that the deceased entered on defendant's track while drunk and in an intoxicated condition and substantially admits that the deceased was killed by the engine.
The above evidence taken in the most favorable light for the plaintiff, as must be done on a nonsuit (Cotton v. R. R.,
Upon the above evidence the case should have been submitted to the jury.Pickett v. R. R.,
In Snipes v. R. R.,
Upon the authorities cited the judgment of nonsuit must be
Reversed.
Cited: Shepherd v. R. R.,
(47)