Citation Numbers: 10 S.E. 691, 104 N.C. 410
Judges: Avery
Filed Date: 9/5/1889
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
— after stating the facts: The Gode, §2326, provides that, “when any cattle or other live stock shall be killed by the engines or cars running on any railroad, it shall be prima facie evidence of negligence on the part of the company in any action for damages against said company; Provided, that no person shall be allowed the benefit of this section unless he shall bring his action within six months after his cause of action shall have accrued.”
The Court below was asked to instruct the jury that, when the cattle killed were yoked to a cart, and in charge of a driver, the statute does not apply, and no presumption of negligence arises from the fact of the killing. The charge givSn in lieu, that the law presumed negligence upon the admitted facts, constitutes the grounds of the first exception.
Where words have a known technical meaning, it must be adopted in construing a statute, but, apart from that, they must be interpreted according to their ordinary import, and,, where there is no ambiguity, but the meaning is clear and certain, not even the preamble or the caption of a statute can be called in aid for the purpose of construction. Adams v. Turrentine, 8 Ired, 147; Blue v. McDuffie, Busb., 131.
The definition of cattle given by Worcester is “a collective name for domestic quadrupeds, including the bovine tribe, also horses, asses, mules, sheep, goats and swine, but especially applied to bulls, oxen, cows and their young.” Lest the term might he understood in its restricted sense as applying to the bovine-
The late Chief Justice, in Doggett v. R. R. Co., 81 N. C., 459, enumerated among the benefits of the law the protection it afforded to owners of live stock killed, when there was no witness who knew the circumstances attending it; but that the Court did not intend to limit its application to cattle or live stock straying free from control, and to cases where there were no witnesses to the transaction, appears clearly from the unmistakable language used in stating the final conclusion reached. “The force of the presumption only applies when the facts are not known, or when, from the testimony, they are uncertain.”
In the case at bar, the important fact, upon which depended the question of negligence, was in dispute. The plaintiff
The train passed at an unusual hour along a narrow canyon, where the wagon road ran, at some points, close beside defendant’s track, and, at others, diverged a little distance from it. The plaintiff had passed the station and then gone over a crossing, near which the wagon road, for a very short distance, was located in the narrow space between the mountain and the track, when he heard a slight blow from the engine, and, almost immediately, it passed around a curve on the mountain, only sixty or seventy yards ahead of him, and the noise and blazing headlight.so frightened the oxen that, in attempting to get out of the way, three of them jumped upon the track and were killed. This occurred less than six months before the action was brought.
The plaintiff further testified that, if the regular station blow, or the crossing blow, had been given at the usual point, he could have stopped his oxen behind a large pile of wood before he reached the narrow place, and could have saved them, but that, because the blow was not given, he had
When a person in charge of a wagon and team approaches a public crossing, it is his duty to look and listen and take every prudent precaution to avoid a collision, even though the approach be made at an hour when no regular train is expected to pass. The same degree of care and caution should be exercised by one who is about to drive into such a narrow and dangerous pass as is described by the witnesses, if he would avoid the responsibility for any injury that may result from his carelessness. But it is the duty of the engineer to blow the whistle or ring the bell at a reasonable distance from such a crossing as was described by the witnesses, in order to give warning to travelers on the ordinary highway running across and near it, and enable them to guard against danger. It is always required of an engineer, if he would relieve the company from liability for negligence, to blow the whistle, as a warning, at a reasonable distance from the crossing of a public highway, or a station, which his train is approaching, and is doubly important where the track winds around curves, between a mountain and river, by the side of a public road; and, if travelers on such highway are subjected to loss by injury to their live stock at a crossing or narrow pass like that described by the witnesses, in consequence of his failure to give such warning as they had a right to expect, the company is liable in damages for such negligence. 2 Wood’s R. L., § 323; Kelly v. St. Paul & C. Railroad Co., 29 Minn., 1; L. C. & C. Railroad Co. v. Garty, 79 Ky., 442; Penn Co. v. Krick, 47 Ind., 368; Pittsburg & C. Railroad Co. v. Jundt, 3 Am. & En. R. Cases, 502; Strong v.
We do not see the force of the objection that the oxen were actually injured, not at a crossing, but at a narrow place where the public highway is jammed between th„e mountain and the railroad track. In. all the cases cited, supra, the doctrine is laid down (even in the absence of a statute) that it is negligence to omit to give a signal by blowing the whistle or ringing a bell in .reasonable time, when a train is approaching a station, and in one of them (Pittsburg & C. Co. v. Jundt) it was held that a railroad company was liable where, in consequence of failing to have a flagman at a city crossing, as a notice to persons driving along a street parallel with the track that a train was approaching, two horses, being driven by the plaintiff, a female, were met by the train, just before reaching the crossing, and frightened so that they ran away and injured her. The failure to have a flagman at the crossing was held evidence of negligence, because the plaintiff had. been accustomed to cross there, and naturally expected, and had a right to expect, the usual warning of danger. In our case, the plaintiff knew the usual place for blowing the signal, and testifies that he was misled by the neglect of the engineer to give the signal at that point. Besides, we have forborne to decide whether the same reasons exist for warning travelers driving in ordinary vehicles in sufficient time to allow them to escape from a narrow pass like that described by witnesses that have induced the Courts to hold that, in the exercise of ordinary care, timely notice must be given that a train is nearing a crossing. The importance of giving signals in such cases, becomes greater when any peculiar circumstances in a given locality enhance the danger of omitting to do so. Penn Co. v. Krick, supra.
The case of Railroad Co. v. Feathers, 10 Lea. (Tenn.) was one in which the Court gave a construction to a statute
The material question is not where the injury was inflicted, but what was its proximate cause," and, if- the plaintiff relying upon the custom of the company to give a particular signal at a certain time, placed himself in a dangerous position and suffered injury, the company is liable for negligence.
The circumstances were such as to suggest caution, both to the plaintiff and the engineer, when the train passed suddenly around a sharp curve along a projecting mountain. We think that the jury have determined, in the manner prescribed by law, which one of them failed to exercise ordinary care. If the plaintiff could have taken refuge behind a woodpile, where the highway had diverged some •distance from the track,, and thus have saved his team harmless, but for the failure of the engineer to blow at the usual place, the negligence of the company was the proximate •cause of the injury, and the plaintiff was entitled to recover the value of the oxen killed. If he blew the whistle at the usual place, and did not wait till the engine was either sixty or seventy yards of plaintiff, the injury was not due to defendant’s negligence. His Honor left the jury to find, from the testimony-, what was the truth as to the time of the blowing of the whistle, and thus to settle the controversy.
Affirmed.