Judges: Walker, Stacy
Filed Date: 11/30/1921
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This action was brought to recover damages for personal injuries to the plaintiff, alleged to have been caused by the defendant's negligence in keeping its crossing in an unsafe condition.
On 29 August, 1914, the plaintiff and his companions were driving in a Ford automobile from Falcon, N.C. to Fayetteville, N.C. and after darkness had set in, they attempted to cross over the tracks of the defendant, where the public road from Dunn to Fayetteville intersects with the said tracks, a little above the station at Wade. In so doing the automobile was wrecked, and one of the passengers, Randall Pusey, was killed, and the plaintiff was knocked senseless and otherwise injured. There were two tracks on the crossing, one of which was then being laid, and had not been completed, and, as plaintiff alleges, rendered the crossing unsafe, and even dangerous, as the rails were exposed and high above the surface of the ground, and further, the track and its condition could not be seen in time to avoid the injury. The other facts necessary to an understanding of the matter will be found in the reported case of Puseyv. R. R.,
The case was submitted to the jury, under the evidence and the charge of the court, and the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff. Judgment thereon, and defendant appealed. After stating the case: The evidence as to the negligence was somewhat conflicting, and it was, therefore, properly submitted to the jury, and the motion for a nonsuit overruled.
We will consider the exceptions in the order of their statement in the record, and in the brief of defendant.
1. It was competent for the witness, M. O. Ballard, to state whether the crossing was constructed by the correct (569) method, as he was an expert and no question was made as to this fact. An expert, having special scientific knowledge, which fits him to do so, may give his opinion about the particular matter in controversy. We said in Summerlin v. R. R.,
2. The evidence as to plaintiff's present indebtedness, as compared with his sound financial condition when he was injured bore upon his earning capacity, which he alleges was greatly impaired by the injuries he received when the car was wrecked at the crossing. The impairment of his earning ability is shown by the fact that, owing to it, he has fallen behind, and whereas formerly he could and did make money and accumulate it, he is now embarrassed in his affairs and deeply involved.
3. The motion to nonsuit was, as we have said, properly overruled, because there was evidence of negligence fit to be considered by the jury.
4. There was no error in the charge as to contributory negligence. That defense must be pleaded, and the burden to show it is upon the defendant. C.S. 523; Kearney v. R. R.,
5. The instruction of the court as to the drunken condition of the plaintiff on the evening of the accident was manifestly correct, as the testimony he mentioned in it was all in the case as to such condition, and it was for the jury to say whether or not he was drunk, and his contributory negligence in this respect caused the injuries.
6. The plaintiff might well assume, in the ordinary course of things, that the defendant's crossing was in a reasonably safe condition, and had been kept so by the defendant. This question was directly involved and decided in Parks v. R. R.,
7. It was obviously right to charge the jury that the negligence of plaintiff, if there was such, would not bar his recovery unless it directly and proximately contributed to his injury. His contribution to his own injury would not prevent a recovery by him, if there was negligence by the defendant which when compared with that of the plaintiff was the proximate cause of his injuries. McNeill v. R. R.,
Plaintiff was, of course, entitled to recover damages for his automobile if it was proximately injured by the negligence of the defendant, in addition to damages for the injuries to herself.
The court granted all of defendant's requests for instructions to the jury.
We find no error that was committed at the trial.
No error.
STACY, J., having presided at one of the former trials of this case in the Superior Court, took no part in the present decision.
Cited: Moore v. Iron Works,
(571)
Horton v. Seaboard Air Line Railroad ( 1911 )
Owens v. Richmond & Danville Railroad ( 1883 )
Pusey v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad ( 1921 )
Tankard v. Roanoke Railroad & Lumber Co. ( 1895 )
McNeill v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad ( 1914 )
Parks v. Southern Railway Co. ( 1899 )