Plaintiff commenced this action to recover damages arising out of a railroad crossing accident between its train and defendant Biscoe Supply Company, Inc.’s (hereinafter “defendant”) cement truck. The trial court directed a verdict for plaintiff on the issues of whether defendant was negligent and whether that negligence proximately caused the accident. The jury found that plaintiff was not contributorily negligent and awarded damages of $260,819.26 to plaintiff. Defendant’s claims against the Department of Transportation were dismissed by the trial court, from which there was no appeal.
The evidence tended to show that on 15 December 1988, defendant’s employee, Early Valley, was driving defendant’s cement truck on Prison Camp Road in Montgomery County. Valley was traveling at the speed limit of fifty-five m.p.h. As he entered a curve in the road about 700 feet before the railroad crossing, Valley applied the brakes, and he continued to apply the brakes until he reached the crossing at a speed of approximately forty to forty-five m.p.h. The crossing had no gates or lights and was obscured by the topography of the area. However, between the curve and the crossing, there were several markings that gave notice of the crossing. The first was a warning sign painted on the pavement 471 feet before the crossing. The second was a warning sign on the side of the road eighty-nine feet before the crossing. Finally, there was a white cross-buck sign at the crossing about fifteen feet from the first rail, and a white line was painted across the
Plaintiff’s employees testified that the engineer sounded the train’s horn from the time the train was about 1,500 feet from the crossing until it reached the crossing. Valley testified that he did not hear the horn. However, Valley further testified that the windows in his truck were rolled up, the heater was on, the mixer was turning, the truck’s engine was backing down, and the two-way radio was on. In fact, Valley admitted that it was possible that the horn sounded and he did not hear it.
Defendant’s first argument on appeal is that the trial court erred in directing a verdict finding that the accident was proximately caused by the negligence of Valley. Defendant contends that when viewed in the light most favorable to it, the evidence showed that because the track was obscured by the topography, there was no point prior to the crossing where Valley could have seen a train approaching even if he had slowed down or stopped. Accordingly, his failure to slow down could not have been a proximate cause of the accident. Therefore, defendant argues, the jury should have been allowed to decide whether Valley’s failure to slow down or stop proximately caused the accident.
The trial court’s granting of a directed verdict for plaintiff on the issue of proximate cause will be upheld where the evidence, taken in the light most favorable to defendant, so clearly shows that defendant’s negligence proximately caused the collision that it will support no other conclusion as a matter of law. Neal v. Booth,
In Helvy v. Sweat,
Defendant next assigns error to the trial court’s failure to submit to the jury as grounds for plaintiff’s contributory negligence the failure of the engineer to abide by plaintiff’s operating rule requiring compliance with track speed limits.
A trial court may properly refuse to give an instruction which is not a correct statement of the law applicable to the evidence. Pasour v. Pierce,
Defendant’s last two assignments of error relate to plaintiff’s damages. First, defendant argues that the trial court erred in admitting into evidence Plaintiff’s Exhibit Number 2, the bill for damages that plaintiff sent to defendant. Defendant contends that the document was hearsay and that its admission did not comport with the requirements of the business records exception to the hearsay rule. “ ‘Hearsay’ is a statement, other than one made by
By its final assignment of error, defendant argues that the damages awarded were in excess of plaintiff’s actual loss. We note that defendant does not argue that the award of damages was excessive under Rule 59 as being the result of passion or prejudice. Nor does it argue that the trial court’s instructions on damages were improper.
The issues of a defendant’s negligence and the amount of damages to award for such negligence are within the province of the jury to decide. Adams v. Carolina Tel. & Tel. Co.,
For the reasons stated, we find no error.
No error.
