29 S.E. 941 | N.C. | 1898
1. Was the plaintiff injured by the negligence of defendant? A. "Yes."
2. Did the plaintiff, by his own negligence, contribute to his injury? A. "No."
3. Could the defendant, by the exercise of ordinary care, have prevented the injury? A. "Yes."
4. What damages, if any, has plaintiff sustained? A. "$500."
The defendant tendered the following issues in lieu of or as additional to those submitted:
1. Was the accident by which plaintiff was injured the result of negligence of the section foreman in charge of the hand-car at the time of the accident? *568
2. Could the defendant, through the engineer and other employees in charge of the excursion train, by due and proper care have discovered the hand-car upon the track in time to stop train and prevent accident?
The court refused to submit the issues, and defendant, excepted.
Defendant also objected to the submission of the third issue as given to the jury, on the ground that it did not correctly state the principles governing the question of contributory negligence, which objection (907) the court overruled, and submitted the issue to the jury; whereupon defendant excepted.
Certain instructions asked for by the defendant and refused by the court are set out in the opinion. There was judgment for the plaintiff according to the verdict, and defendant appealed.
Every phase of defendant's contention could be presented upon the issues submitted, and the first three exceptions are without merit, Patterson v.Mills,
This case was here at a former term — Willis v. R. R.,
The fourth exception was that the court refused to nonsuit the plaintiff under the provisions of chapter 109, Acts 1897. That act was not intended to deprive parties of the right to trial by jury where there is any evidence, and it is but rare that counsel, who advise the bringing of an action, will not be able to produce at least enough evidence to carry the case to the jury. This has been sufficiently commented upon in Mfg. Co. v.R. R., ante, 881; Cable v. R. R., ante, 892; Whitley v. R. R., post, *569 987; Johnson v. R. R., post, 955, and other cases at this term, to make it plain that the Court does not deem that the effect of the act has been to make the weight and effect of the evidence in damage suits always a question of law for the courts.
The refusal of the defendant's 1st, 12th, and 13th prayers are his 5th, 6th, and 7th exceptions.
The first prayer of the defendant was that "When the minds of the jury are in doubt (whether there was negligence or not) they must find for the defendant." This was properly refused. It would not even be correct in a criminal action. In every case, civil or criminal, where there is conflicting evidence, there is probably more or less doubt in the minds of the jury. It is only when there is no reasonable doubt that they should find against the defendant in a criminal action. In a civil action, as the judge charged, the burden is on the plaintiff to make out his case by the preponderance of the evidence.
The twelfth prayer was properly refused. First, because it did not ask an instruction as to an issue or issues, but that "the plaintiff would not be entitled to recover" (Witsell v. R. R.,
The thirteenth prayer was properly refused. It assumed that the rules and regulations were in evidence though the defendant failed to produce them when asked to put them in evidence, and the testimony of the witnesses differed from the recital of facts in the prayer. Besides, if there was a regulation that "it was the duty of the track foreman to protect himself against all trains, regular trains and extra, and was entitled to no notice," it would be an unreasonable regulation.
The eighth and ninth exceptions are to the modification of the seventh and eighth prayers for instructions by adding the words "unless they believed the defendant was guilty of negligence in these other respects which I have mentioned." These other respects were the failure to carry a headlight if dark enough to require it, and the failure to ring the bell or sound the whistle at public crossings, near the point of collision, which were more than usually imperative in consideration of the sharpness of the curve, the darkness, and the storm. All the balance of the thirteen prayers offered by the defendant were given.
The court properly told the jury that the plaintiff was not a passenger, but a mere licensee riding on the hand-car by permission, and that as such he took all the risks of that mode of travel (such as injury by the hand-car running off the track, and the like). But this did not *570 give the defendant the privilege of killing or maiming him at sight by its gross negligence in running a train at high speed out of (910) schedule time, without notice to the foreman, without sounding the whistle at the crossing, ringing no bell, and without a headlight in the approaching darkness, and in a raging storm.
The tenth and eleventh exceptions are that there was no evidence to justify the charge of the court as to the absence of a headlight and the failure to sound the whistle at the crossings. These instructions were guarded and properly left to the jury for the determination of the questions whether there was a necessity for a headlight, and as to whether there were any public crossings near by, and whether the whistle was sounded. There was enough evidence to warrant his doing so.
The other exceptions present no substantial error. The case was fairly presented to the jury.
Affirmed.
Cited: Pretzfelder v. Ins. Co.,