Boney v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad
Boney v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad
Opinion of the Court
after stating the case. . The first and second exceptions are to the refusal to allow a witness for the defendant, J. M. Donlan, an engineer, to answer the following questions:
First. If the jury shall find from the evidence that Mr. Boney’s train had been running at six miles per hour at the time it collided with the train, and the other train with which it collided was running slowly in the same direction, what would have been the effect on the train and engine on which Mr. Boney was riding?
We do not think the ruling was erroneous. If the questions were asked of the witness as an expert, there is no finding or admission that the witness was an expert. As was said by Justice Manning, in Lumber Co. v. R. R., 151 N. C., 220: “We cannot assume that his Honor, in this view, found the witness to be an expert, and then excluded the question and answer. In order that the witness might testify when objection is made, there must be either a finding by the court, or an admission or waiver by the adverse party that the witness was so qualified.”
The questions were also not permissible to elicit the opinion of the witness, as he was not present at the time of the occurrence and the jurors were as competent to form an opinion upon the facts as he. Taylor v. Security Co., 145 N. C., 385; Wilkinson v. Dunbar, 149 N. C., 20.
Again it does not appear that the defendant has been prejudiced by the refusal to permit the questions to be answered, as it is not shown in the record what would have been the answer of the witness, or what the defendant expected to prove by him.
The fourth, fifth and sixth prayers for instruction requested by the defendant were as follows:
Fourth. If the jury shall find that Boney was running his train at a greater rate of speed than six miles per hour at the time he passed the switch, then he was guilty of contributory negligence, and the jury will answer the second issue, Yes.
Fifth. If the jury shall find that Boney did not obey the rule set forth in the time-table, that he must approach the middle-yard cross-over and the switch where the accident occurred with his train under full control and expecting to find the track occupied, but in disregard of this rule approached the said switch and cross-over without having his train under full control, then he was guilty of contributory negligence, and the jury must answer the second issue, Yes.
His Honor' gave these instructions, except he added to each the element of proximate cause, Avhich we think he ought to have done. The question of proximate cause will be considered in discussing other exceptions appearing in the record. The defendant relied principally on its motion to nonsuit, and the exceptions to the refusal to give the following instructions:
Seventh. That if the jury shall find from the evidence that at the time No. 82, the train being run by Boney, deceased, was approaching the switch into which he ran and the switch had no lights, either red or white, and Mr. Boney knew there were no lights, either red or white, as a signal at the switch at the time, and he failed to slacken his speed and stop his engine, then he was guilty of contributory negligence, and the jury will answer the second issue, Yes.
Ninth. That it was the duty of Mr. Boney, engineer, to know the situation and location of the switches leading into the main line of the South Rocky Mount yards, and to observe whether the said switches were lighted and the signals indicated by it, and if the jury shall find from the evidence that the switch lamp at the place of accident was not lighted either with red or white lights, then it became the duty of Mr. Boney, deceased, to. stop his engine and ascertain the cause, and to ascertain if it was safe to pass over the track at that point, and if he failed to do so, he was guilty of contributory negligence, and the jury will answer the second issue, Yes.
There are several reasons for refusing to give these instructions :
1. The answer does not allege that the plaintiff’s intestate was guilty of contributory negligence in that he failed to perform the duties imposed upon him in the instructions, and a defend
(1) Tbat tbe intestate was disobeying a rule by running in excess of six miles an bour.
(2) Tbat be failed to stop wben tbe lantern was waved.
2. Tbe instructions imposed tbe duty without qualification to know tbe exact location of tbe switch in tbe absence of a light, and to note tbat tbe light was not there. Tbe injury occurred in tbe night on a yard of tbe defendant where there were numerous tracks and switches, and it was for tbe jury to say, under these circumstances, whether be could, by tbe exercise of ordinary care, have discovered tbe absence of a light in time to stop tbe train.
3. They omit tbe rule of tbe prudent man. If tbe intestate knew there was no light at tbe switch, be also knew tbat be was running a first-class train on tbe main line, and tbat it was tbe duty of tbe defendant to have tbe track clear five minutes before bis train reached tbe switch, and if there was danger to turn the red light to tbe main line. He bad tbe right to assume tbat these duties bad been performed, and under tbe circumstances tbe question was raised as to whether be acted as a man of ordinary prudence, which it was for tbe jury to decide. Tbe instructions require tbe court to decide, as matter of law, tbat tbe facts embodied in them constitute contributory negligence.
4. They omit tbe element of proximate cause. If tbe intestate knew there was no light at tbe switch and was running in excess of six miles an bour, be was negligent, but it is not every act of negligence, on tbe part of the plaintiff, tbat is contributory negligence in its legal sense.
It is not contributory -unless it is tbe real cause of tbe injury, nor is it so if tbe defendant, by tbe exercise of ordinary care, can avert tbe injury, notwithstanding tbe negligence of tbe plaintiff. There was evidence tbat an employee of tbe defendant was at tbe switch and knew it was broken wben the plaintiff’s intestate was distant one and one-fourth miles, that this em
If so, there was evidence tbat tbe failure to turn tbe red light to tbe main line was tbe proximate cause of tbe death of tbe intestate, and tbat notwithstanding tbe negligence of tbe plaintiff in failing to stop if be knew there was no light at tbe switch, tbat tbe defendant, by tbe exercise of ordinary care, could have averted tbe injury. It may be said tbat under tbe rules of tbe defendant, tbe absence of a light at tbe switch is notice of danger, and tbat if tbe intestate did not regard this, tbe display of a red light would not have caused him to stop. There is force in this view, but there may be a difference of opinion as to tbe conclusion. We think it would not be unreasonable to accept tbe other view, and conclude tbat if tbe intestate knew there was no light at tbe switch, be also knew it was tbe duty of tbe defendant to keep tbe track clear five minutes before bis train reached tbe switch, and to display tbe red light if there was danger, and knowing these facts, be might proceed in tbe absence of a light, when be would not do so in tbe face of a red light, giving positive notice of danger.
Tbe absence of a light would ordinarily indicate nothing except a failure to light tbe lamp, while a red light is a signal of danger.
“Tbe law does not presume contributory negligence. It must be alleged and proven, and tbe defendant must show such facts, either omissions of such cautions or the doing of such acts, from which only one inference, to-wit, tbe plaintiff's negligence, can be drawn, by men of ordinary reason and intelligence.” Farris v. R. R., 151 N. C., 489.
We also conclude tbat tbe motion to nonsuit ought to have been denied. Tbe open switch and tbe collision raise a presumption of negligence (Stewart v. R. R., 137 N. C., 689, and cases there cited), and where such a presumption is raised or a prima facie case is established, tbe jury is justified in finding negligence, unless “satisfied upon all tbe evidence in tbe case
There is also other evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant; two switches open or broken; the failure to maintain lights at the switch; the failure to keep the track clear, and the failure to notify the plaintiff’s intestate of danger, as he approached the switch.
There is also evidence of negligence on the part of the intestate.
TTnder these circumstances, the fact upon which the decision of the case turned was proximate cause, and if there was a phase of the evidence that would justify the jury in finding that, although the plaintiff was negligent, the defendant had the last opportunity, the last clear chance to avoid the injury, it was the duty of the judge to submit the question to them. Edge v. R. R., 153 N. C., 215, and cases there cited.
"We have seen that the evidence presented this question. The jury could find from the evidence that an employee of the defendant was at the switch, and knew it was broken, and appreciated the danger to the approaching train when it was distant one and one-fourth miles; that he could have turned the red light to the main line in an instant, and that this would have been a warning of danger; that he failed to do so; that if he had done so the plaintiff’s intestate could have seen the red light in time to stop the train before it reached the switch; that instead of doing so, he gave no signal until the train was in twenty-five yards of the switch, and then by waving a lantern some distance from the track and not across it, and if so, the jury could find that the negligence of the defendant was the proximate cause of the death of the intestate. '
The jury could also reasonably find from the evidence that Rule 27, saying that “the absence of a signal at a place where a signal is usually displayed must be regarded as a stop signal,” did not affect the right to recover because there was evidence that there was a light at the switch, and that the white light, a notice of safety, was turned to the main line. The plaintiff’s intestate was killed about 2 o’clock a. m. J. 0. Mercer, a wit
The case was submitted to the jury with great care, and the contentions of the defendant were fairly presented. The presiding judge, among other things, charged the jury:
“If the jury shall find that witness Cole waved his lantern across the track of the approaching train of which Boney was engineer and Boney saw the signal, or with the exercise of ordinary care could have seen it, it was his duty to have stopped the engine, and if he could have done so in time to avoid his injury, then he was guilty of contributory negligence, and the jury will answer the second issue, Yes.
“If the jury shall find that Boney was running his train at a greater rate of speed than six miles per hour at the time he passed the switch, and shall further find that this was the proximate cause of the injury, then he was guilty of contributory negligence, and the jury will answer the second issue, Yes.
“If the jury shall find that Boney did not obey the rules set forth in the time-table, that he must approach the middle-yard cross-over and the switch where the accident occurred with his train under full control and expecting to find the track occupied, but in disregard of this rule approached the said switch and cross-over without having his train under full control (and this was the proximate cause of the injury), then he was guilty of contributory negligence, and the jury must answer the second issue, Yes.
“Even though the jury shall find that the defendant was guilty of negligence, yet if they shall find that Boney did not obey the rules set forth in the time-table as to the rate of speed and manner in which he should approach the middle-yard crossing and switch where the accident occurred (and this was the
We have examined each exception and find no error.
No error.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. Without discussing other rulings of the Court which I think were erroneous and entitle the defendant at least to a new trial, I will notice a few which go to the very root of the case, and, in my opinion, are palpably wrong and work great injustice to the defendant. A railroad company would be grossly derelict in its duty, both to the public and its employees, if it failed to adopt such rules and regulations for the running and operation of its trains as make for safety, and it follows that the servant, for whose guidance in the discharge of his important and hazardous duties these rules are made, must obey them, and if he fails to do so and is himself injured by reason of his disobedience, he is to be regarded in law as the author of his own injury, and if thereby he injures others, the railroad company is liable to them, under the rule respondeat superior, and he is liable to the company for all damages caused by his negligence. Holland v. R. R., 143 N. C., 435; Haynes v. R. R., 143 N. C., 154. The intestate’s death was caused, not by the negligence of the defendant, but by his own glaring disobedience of express orders and regulations, which if observed would have carried him on his train safely to his destination. He was not only disobedient, but his conduct was reckless, and, in consequence of it, he rode to his death. I think this appears from the plaintiff’s evidence and the undisputed facts. The tragedy is regrettable, but the law must be administered with cold neutrality. With slight change, we may well repeat what we said in Holland v. R. R., supra: “The intestate was the one to whose keeping had been committed the safety of his comrades in the company’s service (of the passengers on the train) and of his employer’s property, and he was more responsible for it than any one else. He failed in the performance of his duty at the very moment when his obedience to orders and, his vigilance were most required to prevent the resulting catastrophe. His negligence was ever present and the
1. I think the motion to nonsuit should have been granted and for the following reasons: I will assume in the beginning that the red light was not displayed at the switch, and there is no evidence that the white, or safety light, was, so that the case must be considered as if there was no light. Rut that of itself 'is made a signal of danger, as much so as if the red light had been shown, and the duty of the intestate, by the very terms of the rule, was to stop his train. This was the mandate of the rule as much so as if there had been a red light there to warn him of danger. The order wras not even to slow down or bring his train under control, but to stop at once, and herein is to be found the error in'the opinion of the court as to proximate cause. If he had obeyed the rule and stopped, seeing that there was no light at the switch, the accident would have been a physical impossibility, for two trains, one at rest and the other moving away from it, could never collide. This is so very evident that I presume the Court should take judicial notice of it. It is as much an axiom in physics as that a man cannot be in two widely separated places at one and the same time, and as judges, we have no right to close our eyes to the existence of such a fact and refuse to take notice of it without proof and a finding of the
I have so far discussed the case upon the motion for nonsuit and the admitted facts, or upon the plaintiff’s own evidence, favorably construed for her, and when thus considered, there is still another view of the case which conclusively makes against the plaintiff and defeats her right to recover. H. T. Cole, the engineer of the other train, ran down the track about twenty-five yards, and with his lantern signaled Boney to stop. Boney knew it was a stop signal, because plaintiff’s witness, General Burnett, testified that when 200 to 300 yards from the switch he answered it with two short blasts of the whistle, shut off
2. But if the nonsuit should not have been granted, the court erred in refusing to give the instructions requested. I will lay special stress and emphasis on one only — the seventh: “If the jury shall find from the evidence that at the time No. 82, the train being run by Boney, deceased, was approaching the switch into which he ran and the switch had no lights, either red or white, and Mr. Boney knew there were no lights, either red or white, as a signal at the switch at the time, and he failed to ' slacken his speed and stop his engine, then he was guilty of contributory negligence, and the jury will answer the second issue, Yes.” It is said in the opinion of the Court that this instruction should not have been given, first, because there is no averment in the answer upon which it can be based, and second, because it is predicated on the fact that the intestate lenew there was no light, of which there was no evidence. We will consider these reasons in inverse order. As to the intestate’s knowledge that there was no light at the switch, it must be remembered that the instruction asks the jury to find the fact of knowledge, and does not assume that Boney had such knowledge. The only question, therefore, is, was there any evidence of knowledge? We have shown, I think, that it makes no difference, in laiu, whether he had actual knowledge or not, if by the exercise of the care exacted of him, he could have had it. But Burnett, plaintiff’s own witness, testified that he looked and did not see any light. Could the jury infer from this fact and the further fact that it was Boney’s duty to keep a lookout, that he did so, and if Burnett saw no light, that he saw none? But there is other evidence, far more than a scintilla, that Boney was looking, and what is it ? He saw the signal lantern of Cole swaying to and fro, and he would not have seen it if he had not been looking. Another fact, he blew for the station as he saw its
But a difference is supposed to exist between a positive and a negative signal of danger. I think this is based upon a misapprehension of tbe rule, and that there can be no such distinction. Tbe question is not what Boney thought tbe signal should be, but what it is. The “red light” and “no light” are made by the rule positive notice of danger. Tbe mere fact that “no light”
It is suggested that the defendant has not sufficiently pleaded the negligence of Boney in order to rely on it. This seems to me a very strained construction of the answer, one that is contrary to the express direction of the statute: “In the construction of a pleading for the purpose of determining its effect, its allegations shall be liberally construed with a view to substantial justice between the parties.” Pell’s Revisal, sec. 495 and notes. The common law rule is modified and every reasonable intendment is now made in favor of the pleader. Wright v. Insurance Co., 138 N. C., 488. We strictly enforced this provision in favor of the plaintiff, when charging negligence, against the objection of the defendant in Knott v. R. R., 142 N. C., 238, and the case is an authority here. The answer, perhaps, should have been more full and explicit, but I think it
It is further suggested that the witness, J. C. Mercer, testified that when he was there the white glass was turned to the track. This was not evidence that there -was a white light burning at night. It tended to prove the contrary and, at most, was merely conjectural. Byrd v. Express Co., 139 N. C., 273 (Anno. Ed.).It was no more evidence of a white light than the fact that the red glass was turned to the track would be of a red light. It is not the glass that gives the signal, but the light that is in it. Mercer did not say that there was a light in the glass, and if he had so stated, the plaintiff’s own witness, General Burnett, testified that he saw no light there, and that a light could have been seen if one had been at the switch. Edwards v. R. R., 129 N. C., 78. So in this conflict of testimony, if there is any as between Burnett and Mercer, the defendant was entitled to the finding of the jury as to whether there was a light or not, and if there was none, then to the other finding whether Boney knew it (or could have known it if he had looked, which is the same thing), for this was the form of the prayer. The defendant did not assume, in the requested instruction, that there was no light at the switch, nor that Boney knew there was none or could have known it, but asked that both inquiries be submitted to the jury for their finding of the truth in regard to it. Was it not plainly entitled to the instruction, even if the “white glass was turned to the track,” and this is evidence that there was a light ? It was not by any means conclusive and is not so treated in the Court’s opinion.
My conclusion is that the plaintiff’s intestate caused his own death by reckless conduct on his part. He did what his employer told him not to do, and however unfortunate the res^^lt, the defendant is not responsible for it, if we follow our former
Reference
- Full Case Name
- E. BONEY, Administrator v. ATLANTIC COAST LINE RAILROAD COMPANY
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- 9 cases
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- Published