86 S.E. 1036 | N.C. | 1915
Civil action tried upon these issues:
1. Was the plaintiff injured by the negligence of the defendant, as alleged in the complaint? Answer: Yes.
2. Did the plaintiff by his own negligence contribute to his injury, as alleged in the answer? Answer: No.
3. Did the plaintiff assume the dangers and risks, as alleged in (171) the answer? Answer: No.
4. What damages, if any, is plaintiff entitled to recover? Answer: $6,500.
From the judgment rendered the defendant appealed. On 26 June, 1914, the plaintiff, being at that time a civil engineer for the defendant, went to Keysville, Va., to make surveys for a sidetrack. The superintendent met him there and showed him where the track was to be located. The plaintiff then went to work on his survey. He went over the track and marked stations on the rails 100 feet apart, and then located the sidetracks and took some levels. After this was finished he walked back over the track to check the stations. He testified that about three or half-past three in the afternoon he was walking along the track between the rails checking these stations with his notebook. Afte [After] passing station 21, he stepped upon a crosstie from which a small piece 1 1/2 inches by 6 inches "V" shaped, shivered off under his weight. His foot slipped down between the ties into a space about five or six inches deep from the top of the tie to the ballast. He stumbled, fell and dislocated his knee cap.
The principle of law upon which plaintiff rests his case is that defendant owed him a duty to provide him a reasonably safe place to do his work. The plaintiff admits that he could have done his work by walking outside of the track on the ground as well as between the rails on the ties, and that the track was in perfectly safe condition for the operation of trains and for all purposes for which a railroad track is intended. *222
From the circumstances in evidence, we are unanimously of the opinion that the injury inflicted on plaintiff was an accident, pure and simple, and unexpected and unforeseen result of a known cause, which ordinary foresight and precaution by defendant could not guard against.
As was remarked in the consideration of this case, the injury was as much the result of an accident as the hammer case (
All that can be required of the master is that he shall use due and reasonable diligence in providing safe and sound machinery, in providing a safe place, and in the selection of fellow servants of competent skill and prudence, so as to make it reasonably probable that (172) injury will not occur in the exercise of the employment. Labatt's Master and Servant (2 Ed.), Vol. 3, sec. 919; Nail v. Brown,
Railway v. Reynolds,
Again the Court proceeds to say: "It did not appear that this crosstie was not otherwise sound and in all respects sufficient and suitable for the use for which it was intended. It certainly was not the purpose of thecompany, in having ties, to make a way for employees to walk upon, but tomake a safe roadbed for the running of its trains. The simple truth is that the injury the plaintiff received was a mere casualty incident to the ordinary risks which he assumed in accepting his employment. This seems to plain for argument. Accidents will happen, not only in the best regulated families, but upon the best regulated railways as well, and to allow the recovery to stand in the present case would be holding the company liable for the consequences of a mere accident for which it is in no fair view responsible."
Other cases supporting this view are R. R. v. Rieden, 107 S.W. 665;Kerrigan v. R. R., 194 Pa. St., 98.
To require of a railroad company to discover every little "doty place" in every one of its thousands of crossties in order that its employees of every class may walk with absolute safety on them would demand of it a degree of care and diligence almost beyond human endeavor. We are *223 of opinion that the motion to nonsuit should be granted. It is so ordered.
Reversed.
Cited: Taylor v. Lumber Co.,