76 S.E. 16 | N.C. | 1912
The facts are sufficiently stated in the opinion of the Court by MR. JUSTICE WALKER. Plaintiff's intestate was struck by one of defendant's engines and killed, while riding on a wagon with J. E. Puckett over a crossing. There was evidence to the effect that the men in the wagon looked and listened and did not hear or see the train which was approaching. They could not see it because of obstructions. The plaintiff's witness, J. E. Puckett, testified: "When I got there, I stopped, looked, and listened. Neither saw nor heard the train before the horses were on the track; I was unable to see it on account of the orchard, fence, honeysuckle vines, and the cut." He also stated that a train could not be seen until he had reached a point a few feet from the track, or very near it. There was also evidence that the engineer did not give any signal for the crossing by blowing the whistle or ringing the bell of the engine, and evidence to the contrary. There was evidence tending to *253 show that a person on the crossing could have been seen by the engineer when 300 or 400 feet from it. The evidence upon the material question in the case was conflicting.
Defendant requested the court to enter a judgment of nonsuit (311) upon the evidence, as plaintiff's intestate was guilty of such contributory negligence in driving upon the crossing, without looking or listening, as barred his recovery. The judge could not have done so without deciding an issue of fact, which he is forbidden to do, that being the function of the jury. Pell's Revisal, sec. 535, and cases cited in note.
The evidence favorable to defendant's view of the case may be ever so strong and persuasive, but if there is a conflict of testimony, it must be left to the jury, and they must find the facts. This is a case where there was a serious dispute as to the facts, which, of course, carried the case to the jury.
It is our duty, upon a motion for a nonsuit, to consider the evidence in the view most favorable to the plaintiff, for at least one reason, which is, that the jury may adopt his version of the facts as the true one. It would be contrary to all our decisions to discard the proof in his favor and consider only that favorable to the defendant, or to permit the latter to overthrow the former, even if it is more reasonable and convincing. Such a course would contravene the express terms of the statute, and would nullify its plain and explicit injunction, that we, as judges, should confine ourselves to the law of the case and leave the finding of facts to the jury.
The ruling of the court is sustained by Cooper v. R. R.,
Applying these principles to the case, it will appear by a bare reading of the evidence that it should not have been withdrawn from the jury by granting a nonsuit. The jury, by their verdict, evidently found that the intestate and J. E. Puckett did look and listen, in the exercise of that degree of care characteristic of the man of ordinary prudence, and, further, that no signal from the approaching train was given. Hinkle v. R.R.,
In Mesic v. R. R.,
It cannot now be successfully argued, because there was evidence that the intestate could have seen the coming train, that therefor he did see it. His opportunity to see and to hear was a circumstance, if it existed, which the jury could consider in ascertaining whether he did (313) see, but was not conclusive evidence of the fact. In Mayes v. R. R.,
There was no error in the case, that we have been able to discover, after a careful examination of it.
No error.
Cited: Johnson v. R. R.,