66 S.E. 586 | N.C. | 1909
Action to recover damages for alleged negligent killing of the plaintiff's intestate.
It appeared in evidence that on 9 March, 1903, the intestate was run over and killed by a train of defendant company, as he was endeavoring to cross the railroad at a public crossing, in the town of Monroe, N.C.; that plaintiff, having duly qualified as administratrix, instituted an action to recover for the alleged negligent killing within twelve months of the occurrence, and that same was pending in the Superior Court of Union from term to term till Fall Term, 1904, when a judgment of nonsuit was entered, and within twelve months of such judgment plaintiff commenced a new action against defendant company in *527 the county of Mecklenburg, and same was there pending till April Term, 1908, when a second judgment of nonsuit was had, and plaintiff commenced the present action against defendant for such alleged cause on 10 March, 1909; and on the trial the facts and circumstances of the transaction as claimed by plaintiff were also shown in evidence. The case on appeal further states:
"At the conclusion of the plaintiff's evidence, the defendant moves to nonsuit, under the Hinsdale Act. The court granted the motion, upon two grounds: (547)
1. That the plaintiff's action is barred by the statute of limitations, not having been brought within the time the law requires actions in such cases to be brought.
2. From all the evidence introduced by the plaintiff, the court is of the opinion that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover.
Thereupon, judgment was rendered, as appears in the record, and from the foregoing ruling of his Honor, and from the said judgment in the case, the plaintiff appealed to the Supreme Court and assigned said ruling and judgment as error.
After stating the case: The first ground for his Honor's ruling, as indicated in the above statement of the case on appeal, has been expressly resolved against the defendant's position in Meekins v. R. R.,
True, we have held in several well-considered decisions that the requirement of the statute (Revisal, sec. 59), giving a right of action for death caused by the wrongful act, neglect or default of another, that such action shall be "brought within one year after such death," is not in strictness a statute of limitation, but is a condition affecting the cause of action itself. Gulledge v. R. R.,
This has been the accepted construction of the statute, now Revisal, sec. 370, as it affects causes of action of this character, since the decision was rendered, in September, 1902, and the case has since been cited with approval several times and held to be decisive. Thus, in Gulledge v. R. R.,supra, Associate Justice Brown said: "Nor have we overruled Meekins v. R.R.,
And in Nunnally v. R. R., disposed of at Spring Term, 1904, in a percuriam opinion (
Not only is this the primary significance of the language of the statute, giving a right of action in case of wrongful conduct causing death, and its true meaning, as established by these authoritative interpretations, but this construction is in accord with right, reason and justice. No doubt the chief consideration for this requirement of the statute was to notify defendants, frequently the employers of labor in large numbers, that their attention might be drawn to the occurrence, and the evidence bearing upon it noted and in some way secured and preserved, and this purpose is reasonably met by the original institution of the action within the time specified. On the contrary, after action is commenced, a trial can rarely ever be had within the year. A deserving plaintiff is sometimes unavoidably interrupted in the preparation of his case. At times he may be presently surprised on the trial; and to hold that a nonsuit, rendered necessary in some such way, should bar any further action, *529 would in many cases work grave injustice and amount to denial of a substantial right.
It wase [was] urged on the argument that a proper construction of section 370 of the Revisal, allowing a new action to be brought within one year after nonsuit, would be that the provision applies only to one nonsuit, and thereafter the original restriction on these causes of (549) action should obtain. But we do not think this a correct position. In Meekins v. R. R., supra, it was said that the section in question applies to "all cases of nonsuit"; and, while we find no case at hand where the facts directly present the question, it has been the construction of the statute, uniformly acted on with us, that the provision applies as often as a nonsuit is taken; this on the idea that the time the first action was pending is not counted against the plaintiff, the only remedy in case of vexatious litigation being some procedure in the nature of a bill of peace.
Thus, in Long v. Orrell,
"By bringing an ejectment, a party then having the right of entry shall continue to have it as long as that action pends; and afterwards, also, if within one year afterwards he will bring another action, and so on, from time to time, no matter who may be at any time the tenant in possession."
And Chief Justice Ruffin, in the opinion, thus further refers to this position, as follows: "The Court is well aware of the consequences of this construction, as it leaves the right of entry without limitation, if the party entitled will bring an ejectment within seven years, and successive actions afterwards, within a year after a verdict, even, against him in prior suit. But the terms of the act, and the nature of the rights on which it operates, render it the unavoidable construction; and if it proves a mischief, it is not for the judiciary, but the Legislature, to apply the corrective by adopting a provision similar to that in the Statute of Anne, or requiring the second or some certain one of the actions to be prosecuted with effect, or in some other way giving the repose to which long possessions are entitled, in policy and justice."
And in Freshwater v. Baker,
It has been suggested that our present ruling is contrary to the principle this Court has upheld in interpreting certain contracts of insurance, by which a right of action is restricted to a specified time, as in Muse v. Ins. Co.,
While we hold that the trial judge made an erroneous ruling as to the nonsuits and their effect on the rights of the parties, we concur with his Honor in ordering a nonsuit, on the ground that the facts in evidence failed to disclose a good cause of action.
From these facts it appears that the intestate was killed at a public crossing, in the town of Monroe, by an engine of defendant company, which approached without giving the proper signals; that this approach was in the daytime, in full view, if the intestate, in the exercise of proper care, had been properly attentive to his own placing and the dangers incident to it, and that this negligence on the part of the intestate was concurrent with that of defendant's employees at the precise time and place of the injury, and comes clearly within the accepted definition of contributory negligence, as contained and approved in many well-considered decisions on the subject. In Cooper v. R. R.,
"Where the view is unobstructed, a traveler who attempts to cross a railroad track, under ordinary and usual conditions, without first (551) looking, when by doing so he could note the approach of a train in time to save himself, by reasonable effort, is guilty of contributory negligence." *531
And while we have held in many recent decisions on the subject that facts and attendant circumstances may so qualify this doctrine in certain cases, the question of contributory negligence should be submitted to the jury, as, in Inman v. R. R.,
On this statement, we think the intestate was guilty of contributory negligence, barring recovery, and the order of the court below dismissing the case on a judgment of nonsuit must be
Affirmed.
Cited: Coleman v. R. R.,