Judges: Walker
Filed Date: 12/14/1910
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This action was brought to recover damages for an injury to the plaintiff, alleged to have been caused by the defendant's negligence. Plaintiff and two other employees had been engaged in loading a flat car, which was attached to a "material or work train," with ties taken from an abandoned section of the defendant's road. The ties were piled at each end of the car and toward the middle, where a vacant space was left. The train was moved out and onto the main track, where the hands were ordered to level the ties by placing some of them in the middle of the car. The plaintiff and the two other hands who assisted him got upon the car, the plaintiff standing between the two piles of ties and the others on either side of one of the piles. While they were moving the ties one or two of them fell from the pile and injured *Page 40
(52) the plaintiff's foot. It does not appear with any degree of certainty what caused the ties to fall, unless it was insufficient support or accidental jostling. If they had been carelessly placed upon the car, the plaintiff was as much responsible for their condition as the other hands; but the evidence does not justify the imputation of negligence to any of them in the manner of doing the work. For all that does appear, it was just one of those accidents which sometimes occur without our being able to ascribe it to any particular cause. It would seem to come within the definition of an accident, which is "an event resulting from an unknown cause, or an unusual and unexpected event from a known cause; chance; casualty" (Crutchfield v. R. R.,
Our reading and study of the evidence, as set forth in the record, does not disclose any act of negligence on the part of the defendant. If there was any negligence at all, it could better be imputed to the plaintiff in taking his position on the car between the two piles of cross-ties, if it was a dangerous one, than to any one else. The hands did the work assigned to them in their own way and without any special instruction as to the manner of doing it, and there is nothing to indicate that it was of such a character as to be inherently dangerous or likely to result in injury to any one, if carefully done. There was nothing in its nature which called for anything more than ordinary skill or even any experience in work of a like kind. The plaintiff required no instruction as to the proper method of doing so simple a piece of work. That degree of care which every man of reasonable prudence exercises in the ordinary affairs of life would have been a sufficient safeguard against injury. The recent decision of this Court in Warwick v. Oil and Ginning Co.,
The principle stated in Covington v. Furniture Co.,
A careful examination of the case leads us to the conclusion (54) that if the injury to the plaintiff was caused by negligence, it was not that of the defendant, and the motion for a nonsuit should have been granted. The action should, therefore, be dismissed, and judgment to that effect will be entered in the court below.
Reversed.
Cited: Wells v. R. R.,
Lassiter v. Seaboard Air Line Railway ( 1909 )
Warwick v. Lumberton Cotton Oil & Ginning Co. ( 1910 )
House v. Southern Railway Co. ( 1910 )
Alexander v. . Mfg. Co. ( 1903 )
Covington v. . Furniture Co. ( 1905 )
Brookshire v. Asheville Electric Co. ( 1910 )
Martin v. Highland Park Mfg. Co. ( 1901 )
Brown v. J. S. Scofields Sons Co. ( 1917 )
Poole v. Norfolk Southern Railroad ( 1932 )
Wells v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad ( 1913 )
Angel v. Carolina Spruce Co. ( 1919 )
MacE v. . Mineral Co. ( 1915 )
Bradford v. . English ( 1925 )
Lynch v. Carolina, Clinchfield & Ohio Railway Co. ( 1913 )