Judges: Stacy, Seawell
Filed Date: 5/25/1938
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
SEAWELL, J., took no part in the consideration or decision of this case. Civil action to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the wrongful act, neglect or default of the defendants.
Plaintiff was injured about 9 o'clock on the morning of 7 November, 1935, at a railroad crossing in Salisbury, N.C. when the truck he was driving was struck by the tender of an engine operated by the corporate defendant, with Joe Lee the engineer in charge.
Plaintiff testified that he was employed as a truck driver for the Air Reduction Sales Company of Charlotte and was engaged in delivering oxygen and acetylene cylinders on the morning in question; that E. R. Waller, his helper, was sitting on his right in the cab seat; that it had been raining, but had stopped or was misting and there was a heavy fog; that he could see "through this mist that morning" 75 or 100 feet; that he was thoroughly familiar with the crossing and its four regular tracks, plus a switch track, making five in all; that he knew a regular train or shifting engine might be coming across the tracks at any time as the crossing was near the shifting yards of the corporate defendant; that he stopped about ten feet from the switch track, looked and listened and heard nothing; that he next stopped about ten feet of the first track, *Page 611 looked and listened, and did not hear or see anything; that he then started up again, traveled a distance of forty or fifty feet in low gear at a speed of three or four miles an hour, and was struck by the tender of a shifting engine on the fourth track. "As to whether I looked south (to plaintiff's right and in the direction of the engine), I glanced that way. . . . I glanced south after I started up. I don't know exactly where I was when I glanced south, but it was something like between the first and second tracks. After that I didn't look south any more, looked to my left. I never did see the engine with which I collided. I didn't see the train at all."
Plaintiff's helper testified that he kept a close lookout down the tracks in the direction of Salisbury or towards the south; that he first saw the tender of the engine when the front wheels of the truck were about the fourth track; that he couldn't tell whether the engine was moving or standing still on account of the fog; that it was within 50 or 65 feet before he was able to determine that it was moving — backing up; that no bell or whistle, signal or warning of any kind was given of its approach; that its speed was from 40 to 50 miles an hour; that he called out to the plaintiff to "look out" just before it hit the truck.
The evidence on behalf of the defendants tends to show quite a different state of facts. The engineer testified that he saw the truck and thought it would stop; that he gave the usual signals, and applied the emergency brakes when he discovered the truck was on the fourth track; that the rain had ceased falling and while there was some slight mist, there was no fog; that he was running around fifteen or twenty miles an hour and "I think the truck was making about the same speed, around 12 to 15 miles an hour. . . . The truck did not stop — didn't make any halt whatever."
The motions for nonsuit were overruled, and in apt time the defendants requested the court to instruct the jury that "unless you find the plaintiff's vision was obstructed by a fog, you should answer the second issue (contributory negligence), `Yes.'" Refused; exception.
The usual issues of negligence, contributory negligence and damages were submitted to the jury and answered in favor of the plaintiff.
From judgment on the verdict, the defendants appeal, assigning errors.
The one circumstance which save the case from nonsuit, Godwin v. R. R.,
It follows, therefore, that the case should have been made to turn on the finding of this fact in accordance with the defendants' prayer. Lee v.R. R.,
Speaking to the mutual and reciprocal duties of trainmen and travelers on approaching a public crossing, in Moore v. R. R.,
Plaintiff makes the point that the requested instruction is too narrow in that it omits the use of the word "mist" in connection with the word "fog," It is true some of the witnesses speak of the "mist," others of the "fog," and in several instances, perhaps both words are used, but it is conceded that the two were employed interchangeably throughout the trial. The gist of the prayer is, that unless plaintiff's vision was obstructed or obscured, he ought not to recover, because admittedly he drove directly in front of an on-coming engine, which he should have seen but for the atmospheric condition. Bullock v. R. R.,
The case lends itself to much writing, as was said in Eller v. R. R.,supra, but, in the end, it all comes to the single question whether the requested instruction should have been given. We are constrained to hold that it should. This necessitates another hearing.
New Trial.
SEAWELL, J., took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.
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