45 S.E. 1021 | N.C. | 1903
It has been decided by this Court over and over again that a railroad company, through its locomotive engineer on a moving train during daytime, owes no duty to give signals to a pedestrian on its track who is apparently in possession of his faculties, and in the absence of any reason to suppose that he is not. And the reason is that the engineer may reasonably believe, and act upon the belief, that the walker on the track will get off in time to prevent being stricken. McAdoov. R. R.,
In the case before us the plaintiff's intestate, at the time when he was killed by one of the defendant's engines, was walking, with a bag or sack on his back, between the main track and a side-track, the space intervening between the tracks being eight feet. People were accustomed to walk there, and there was room enough for that purpose between trains of cars on both tracks at the same time. As he was passing an engine at rest, but exhausting steam, on the side-track, either to avoid the escaping steam or to cross the track to reach Fifth Street, he stepped upon the main track and was immediately stricken by an engine hauling a train of cars on the main track and moving in the same direction that the plaintiff's intestate was going. The evidence of the plaintiff was to the effect that there were no signals of bell or whistle. The plaintiff further introduced the fifth allegation of the complaint and the fifth paragraph of the answer. It was alleged in that part of the complaint that he (plaintiff's intestate) had a heavy sack on his back, which bent him over and compelled him to look downward; that opposite to where he was walking, on the switch track, was an engine blowing off steam, making a great noise and making it impossible almost to see and almost impossible to hear; that on account of the noise of the engine blowing off steam and the cloud of steam in which plaintiff's intestate was enveloped, he was unaware of the approach of the train and unable to see same (612) on the main-line track; that at all times while the engine on the main line was approaching plaintiff's intestate within a distance of two hundred yards or more the engineer in charge of the defendant's engine, who was defendant's employee, saw or in the exercise of due care could have seen plaintiff's intestate was in a perilous position, and the said engineer in the exercise of due care could have prevented and avoided the killing of plaintiff's intestate."
The defendant, in the fifth paragraph of its answer, denied "that at all times, while the engine on the main line was approaching plaintiff's intestate at the distance of two hundred yards or more the engineer in charge of the defendant's engine saw or in the exercise of due care could have seen that plaintiff's intestate was in a perilous position, and that said engineer, by exercise of due care, could have prevented and avoided killing plaintiff's intestate." In the argument here the plaintiff's counsel contended that the defendant, by the wording of the fifth paragraph of his answer, admitted that the plaintiff could not see the engineer on *472
the approaching train or hear the approach of the train because of his position amidst the escaping steam and noise of the engine on the sidetrack, and that the plaintiff was really unaware of the approach of the train and unable to see it. But the allegation of the complaint is not that he could not see or hear, but that owing to the noise and the steam it was made impossible almost to see and almost impossible to hear. Neither is it alleged in the complaint that before he walked into the escaping steam or before he stepped upon the main track he looked or listened. Nor can it be surmised that the plaintiff intended in his complaint to allege that the plaintiff, before he stepped into the escaping steam or upon the main track, could not see or hear the coming train. The answer in nowise admitted the negligence of the defendant, but denied (613) it. The plaintiff introduced only one witness as to the killing — W. L. Wentz. That witness testified, in answer to a question put to him by the plaintiff's counsel as to whether the engine on the sidetrack was "making considerable noise," "just ordinary fuss." "He stepped on the end of the cross-ties to shun that engine on the side-track — the noise." On cross-examination he was asked: "If there was any steam being made by that engine standing still on the side-track, was that in the way of the man?" He said: "I don't know whether there was any smoke at all, but the old man stepped up there; as I understood, to get out of the way of the engine." Question: "That is just supposition on your part?" Answer: "It was making a noise — I am satisfied about that." Q.: "Whatever steam or smoke there was, it was south of it?" Ans.: "Yes, between him and the depot." The engine that struck the intestate was moving southward and the stationary engine on the side-track was heading toward the north. Upon an inquiry by the court the witness said that at the time the plaintiff stepped upon the main track he was ten or fifteen feet up the road from the stationary engine. The witness further said: "There was nothing to prevent him from seeing the engineer or the engineer from seeing him." Taking the alleged sections of the complaint and answer and the evidence of Wentz, we find not even a scintilla of evidence that the defendant's engineer was negligent. But even if the defendant's engineer had been negligent in not giving a warning whistle or signal, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover, because his own negligence and carelessness were the immediate cause of the injury. In Matthews v. R. R., supra, the Court said: "It is suggested that it is the engineer's duty to sound his whistle and give the plaintiff notice of the approaching train. If we assume that he should have done so when a person was walking ahead on the main track, we see no reason, and presumably he did not, why he should sound the whistle when the (614) plaintiff was walking on the sidewalk of the track, by which is *473
meant the footpath at the end of the cross-ties, because he was then out of danger, and the engineer reasonably assumed that he would stay there and step further off from the track when he saw the train. For some singular and peculiar reason the plaintiff moved into a dangerous position at a critical moment, an event which the engineer could not foresee or anticipate. If the defendant was negligent in not giving a signal sound, the act of the plaintiff was much greater carelessness and was the immediate cause of the injury, and he cannot be excused for such disregard of his personal safety." In Syme v. R. R.,
We therefore concur with his Honor in the opinion that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover, because there was no evidence fit to be submitted to the jury tending to show negligence on the part of the defendant's *474 engineer, and also because by the undisputed facts, considered in any phase presented by them, the intestate was negligent in failing to look and listen before he left the safe path between the tracks and stepped upon the main track, while the engineer was not negligent in acting on the belief that the intestate would stay where he was.
Affirmed.
Cited: Crenshaw v. R. R.,
(616)