Judges: Faircloth
Filed Date: 9/5/1895
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
It is not necessary to enter into a general discussion of the duties and liabilities of a railroad when running its train. The question in this case depends upon the testimony of the plaintiff, as the court held that upon all of his evidence he could not recover, and the case was not submitted to the jury.
The plaintiff testified: "I am 22 years old. Before the injury I was healthy and strong. I lost my arm near Caswell on defendant (641) road. Was between two culverts, three and a half miles this side of Dover. Was hurt by the connecting rod of the engine; was coming towards Goldsboro and was on right-hand side coming this way, walking in a side-track near the track, and the train was on me before I knew it. I was so alarmed or blinded, instead of turning away from the train I turned towards it. The train did not blow, and was on me before I knew anything about it. Before I knew anything I *Page 443 was struck. I had been taking quinine and was deaf that day. The first person who came to me was Mr. Hawkins. Drs. Woodley and Hyatt were called in. They amputated my arm. I was confined two months and suffered much, like to have died. I was between two crossings, was as far from front crossing as from here to front door of building. The road at that point was straight and level. I could not hear well; the wind was blowing hard that day and I had been taking quinine. I was coming from Dover towards Kinston, and had not looked back from the time I left Dover till I was struck by the train."
Cross-examined: "It was the mail train in the morning, as train was going towards Goldsboro. I had worked at saw-mill near the train. Don't know whether it was schedule time or not. I was hurt by the engine rod as train was moving. I turned towards the train. I had been walking on sidewalk of track, and when I did hear it the train was right on me, and instead of turning away from train turned towards it in my confusion, and was struck by reason of turning towards the train."
It is suggested that it was the engineer's duty to sound his whistle and give plaintiff notice of the approaching train. If we assume that he should have done so when a person was walking ahead on the main track, we see no reason, and presumably he did not, why he should blow the whistle when the plaintiff was walking on (642) the sidewalk of the track, by which is meant the footpath at the ends of the cross-ties, because he was then out of danger and the engineer reasonably assumed that he would either stay there or step further off from the track when he saw the train. For some singular and peculiar reason the plaintiff moved into a dangerous position at a critical moment, an event which the engineer could not foresee nor anticipate. If the defendant was negligent in not giving a signal sound, the act of plaintiff was much greater carelessness and was the immediate cause of the injury, and he cannot be excused for such disregard of his personal safety.Parker v. R. R.,
Affirmed.
Cited: Markham v. R. R.,
High v. Carolina Central Railroad ( 1893 )
Free v. Southern Railway ( 1909 )
Davis v. Southern Railway Co. ( 1916 )
Patterson v. Charlotte Electric Railway, Light & Power Co. ( 1912 )
Markham v. Raleigh & Gaston Railroad ( 1896 )
Crenshaw v. . Street R. R. ( 1907 )
Ward v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad ( 1914 )
Cox v. Atlantic Coast Line R.R. Co. ( 1947 )