64 S.E. 401 | S.C. | 1909
April 9, 1909. The opinion of the Court was delivered by The plaintiff recovered judgment against the defendants for $1,350, as damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by reason of a rear-end collision between two of defendant's trains at Pineville, N.C., on November 28, 1905, while plaintiff was a passenger on one of said trains.
The defendants made a motion to direct a verdict and a motion for new trial on the ground that there was no testimony to sustain the allegations of negligence set forth in the complaint, which motions were refused and these rulings are the main subject of exception. The complaint alleged that defendant Southern Railway Company was a common carrier of passengers operating a railroad from Columbia, S.C. to Charlotte, N.C.; that plaintiff was received in one of its trains as a passenger from Fort Mill, S.C. to Charlotte, N.C.; that F.G. Whitlock was agent of defendant railway company at Fort Mill, S.C. The allegations to which special attention is directed are in the fourth and fifth paragraphs as follows:
4. "That at the time aforesaid, to wit: on or about the 28th of November, 1905, the defendants herein negligently permitted one of the trains of the defendant railway company, following the train upon which plaintiff was being *347 transported as a passenger, as aforesaid, to collide with the train upon which plaintiff had taken passage and was being transported, the collision being a rear-end collision, and the negligence of F.G. Whitlock, the agent and servant of his codefendant, consisting in his failure to give notice to the following train that the train upon which the plaintiff was riding was ahead of it, upon the same track, preceding it in the direction of Charlotte, N.C., which negligence was also the negligence of the defendant railway company.
5. "That in the collision which occurred as hereinbefore set forth, a heavy lamp frame in the car upon and in which the plaintiff was riding, with a lamp in it, was forcibly wrenched by the shock from its fastening and fell upon and struck the plaintiff on the head rendering him unconscious; and in the jar incident to and produced by the collision, the plaintiff was thrown about in the car and was wounded and bruised. * * *"
Appellants contend that the only specific act of negligence alleged is the failure of Whitlock "to give notice to the following train that the train upon which the plaintiff was riding was ahead of it upon the same track," that no testimony was offered to prove that it was the duty of Whitlock to give such notice, that the general allegation of negligence was controlled by the specific act alleged, and that, therefore, plaintiff had failed to establish any case under the complaint.
The general rule upon which appellant relies is thus stated in Goodwin v. Ry.,
"Where a complaint is general in its allegations of negligence and the defendant does not move to have the allegations made definite and certain the plaintiff may introduce under the general allegations any competent evidence to support the charge of negligence. Spires v. R.R.Co.,
Under this rule a verdict should have been directed or new trial granted as to defendant Whitlock. He was a mere agent of defendant company in charge of its depot at Fort Hill, S.C. and was not shown to have stood in any relation of duty to plaintiff. There was no testimony that it was his duty to give the notice alleged in the complaint, which was the only act of negligence alleged against him. Hence as against him there was no case.
But with respect to the defendant company a different relation appears. Under the allegations and testimony, the relation of carrier and passenger existed between them, from which sprang the duty of defendant company to exercise the highest degree of care to transport plaintiff with safety. According to the rule in this State, a presumption of negligence arises against the carrier on proof that a passenger on its train was injured as the result of some agency or instrumentality of the carrier, some act of omission or commission of the servants of the carrier or some defect in the instrumentalities of transportation. Steele v. R.R. Co.,
Having made out a prima facie case upon proof of facts alleged in the complaint, plaintiff could rest upon such case and could not be defeated merely because he failed to prove other allegations in the complaint not essential to his cause of action against the defendant carrier. Hence, in the application of the general rule stated in Goodwin v. Ry.,
The sixth exception complains of error in instructing the jury as follows: "If a man is injured on one of the railroad trains, being their passenger, and the railroad doesn't exercise the highest degree of care, he is entitled to compensation for that injury." It is contended this instruction made a common carrier an insurer and eliminated the questions of proximate cause and contributory negligence.
Contributory negligence not having been pleaded is not involved in the case. The instruction given to the jury, construed as a whole, made it clear that defendants were to be held liable only for injury proximately caused by their negligence as alleged.
The foregoing conclusions dispose of the first exception as to the admissibility of testimony.
The remaining exception as to the admissibility of testimony cannot be sustained. The declaration of plaintiff as to his condition just after his restoration *350 to consciousness, a minute or two after the collision, was properly admitted as falling within the rule of res gestae.
The judgment of the Circuit Court as to the defendant Southern Railway Company is affirmed, but as to defendant Whitlock it is reversed.