90 S.E. 1015 | N.C. | 1916
CLARK, C. J., concurring in result, discusses grade crossings. Plaintiff alleged that in his intestate, J. W. Stout, was killed by a collision between an automobile, driven by another, in which he was riding, and a train of defendant at a crossing in East Kings Mountain on 17 August, 1914, and that his death was caused by defendant's negligence. The jury returned the following verdict:
1. Was the plaintiff's intestate killed by the negligence of the servants and agents of the Southern Railway Company, as alleged in the complaint? Answer: "No."
2. What damage, if any, is plaintiff entitled to recover? No answer. Judgment thereon, and defendant appealed.
There was no issue as to contributory negligence, and there was no such question in the case, as it was not tried upon that theory, but rather upon the question of proximate cause. We have examined the charge carefully and find it to be an accurate (855) statement of the law as applicable to the facts, and it was in exact accordance with the principles as laid down by this Court in Cramptonv. Ivie,
There are some questions of evidence, but none of them, had there been any error, is of importance enough to warrant a reversal. The judge was correct in all these rulings. As to some of the questions excluded there was no sufficient indication of what the witness would have answered, and others had no substantial relevancy to the case. The evidence admitted on plaintiff's objections was clearly competent. The requests for instructions as to contributory negligence were given in the charge to the extent that plaintiff was entitled to them. The negligence of the driver was permitted to be considered by the jury only upon the question of proximate cause, and this view is sustained by Crampton v.Ivie, supra, and Bagwell v. R. R., supra. The subsequent changes in signals or warnings for additional safety were properly excluded under the circumstances as proof of negligence. Precautions against the future cannot be considered as an admission of actionable negligence in the past. R. R. v. Hawthorne,
We have considered the record in this appeal most carefully in view of the commendable zeal of and the able presentation of it here by counsel for plaintiff, but we have been unable to conclude otherwise than that the learned judge who presided at the trial committed no error, but in every respect thoroughly safeguarded the plaintiff's interests.
No error. *914