35 S.E. 812 | N.C. | 1900
The complaint alleged no demand upon the town authorities for payment of plaintiff's claim, previous to suit, and the defendant moved to dismiss the action on that account. Motion refused. Defendant excepted. *256
There was evidence tending to show that in the town of Marion there was a passway along the right of way of the Southern Railway Company, used as a public street; that the town authorities had kept in repair a good pavement on the south side of it, but the northern side was neglected, and had become unsafe by reason of holes washed out on that side. Into one of these holes the plaintiff in passing, at night, on that side, fell and received serious injuries. The evidence was conflicting as to whether the plaintiff was aware of the condition of that side of the passway and knew about the holes. She testified that she did not, and if she ever knew about the holes she had forgotten; that she had been absent from Marion for some three months, and there were no holes there when she left; that she fell into one of them on the night of her return; that she had passed there a hundred times.
The charge of his Honor applicable to this part of the case, and excepted to by defendant, is repeated in the opinion.
The jury found by their verdict that the plaintiff had been injured by the negligence of defendant; that she had not by her own negligence contributed to her own injury, and awarded her $500.
Judgment accordingly. Appeal by defendant. The authorities of the town of Marion in (414) 1881 commenced to use a part of the right of way of the Southern Railway Company as a street. It seems that the street was too narrow to permit of sidewalks on both sides thereof, and that up to 1889 a sidewalk was made and kept up on the north side of the street when the sidewalk was changed to the south side of the street. The plaintiff, who was a resident of Marion, on her return to that place after an absence of a few months, on a train of the Southern Railway Company, upon going to her house along this street at 12 o'clock at night, took the old sidewalk or path on the north side of the street instead of the well kept walkway on the southern side, and fell into a hole in the path, whereby she sustained personal injury, and instituted this action against both the railroad company and the town of Marion for the recovery of damages therefor.
She alleged that she had often walked along that path, and that when she left Marion in January it was in good condition. The defendants in their answer averred that "she (plaintiff) knew of her own personal knowledge that the north side of said thoroughfare was not constructed or prepared or intended to be used by foot passengers, and that the corporation of Marion had provided a sidewalk for foot passengers on the south side thereof, of easy access and perfectly safe. And this defendant *257 further alleges that the plaintiff had knowledge of the excavation, and voluntarily and carelessly, through inadvertence or indifference to exercise due care, and negligently and for convenience refused to go upon the sidewalk prepared for foot passengers, and took the chance of the dangerous path that led over the washout, and was injured, if at all, by her own contributory negligence." After the pleadings were read, the defendant town of Marion moved to dismiss the action on the ground that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action in that it did not allege a demand upon the town under section 757 of the Code. There was no (415) error in the refusal of his Honor to sustain this motion.
In Shields v. Durham,
His Honor, after setting out the contentions of the respective sides to the jury, instructed them, "That though she (plaintiff) may have known of the existence of this defect prior to this time, yet the court further charges you that she is not required to carry around in her memory the defect in the street, and if she may have known of its existence, at the time she did not think about it, and was injured, that would not be contributory negligence." We think there was error in that instruction.
The court most probably had reference to the decision in Russellv. Monroe,
In Butler v. Covington,
There is nothing in Bunch v. Edenton,
New trial.
DOUGLAS, J., dissents.
Cited: Neal v. Marion,
(418)