Judges: DeviN
Filed Date: 11/19/1947
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Action to recover damages for wrongful death of plaintiff's intestate alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant. It was alleged that defendant negligently failed properly to safeguard a small pool which it permitted to be maintained on its right of way near its station in Aulander, N.C. and that in consequence plaintiff's intestate, a child of less than three years, was drowned.
At the close of plaintiff's evidence motion for judgment of nonsuit was allowed, and from judgment dismissing the action plaintiff appealed. *Page 223 Near its railroad station in Aulander, the defendant had permitted the construction and maintenance of a small circular unenclosed pool, six and one-half feet in diameter and twenty-four inches deep. There were some goldfish in the pool. Across the street or road from the pool was an open baseball ground or park in which children were accustomed to play. On the morning of 30 June, 1946, the plaintiff's intestate, aged two years and seven months, in company with four other small children whose ages ranged from five to ten years, left the home of the plaintiff, with her consent, crossed the railroad track and went to the ball ground, some two hundred and forty feet distant. After the children had played a while, the intestate said he was going home and left, going in that direction. Sometime afterward this child was found in the pool, drowned.
The plaintiff asks recovery for the death of the child on the principle enunciated in Barlow v. Gurney,
Deplorable as was the death of the child by drowning in the shallow pool, the evidence does not make it appear that this unfortunate occurrence was one which reasonably should have been anticipated and guarded against by the defendant. Boyette v. R. R., supra; Hedgepath v. Durham,
The judgment of nonsuit will be upheld.
Affirmed. *Page 224