Barnes v. Seaboard Air Line Railroad

100 S.E. 519, 178 N.C. 264, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 436
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 15, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 100 S.E. 519 (Barnes v. Seaboard Air Line Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnes v. Seaboard Air Line Railroad, 100 S.E. 519, 178 N.C. 264, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 436 (N.C. 1919).

Opinions

Claeb:, C. J.

This was an action for tbe wrongful death of plaintiff’s intestate, a farmer about twenty-one years of age, who had come to Lumberton on some business. While at the -station of the defendant railroad company the agent of the express company engaged him to help load a heavy iron shafting on the express car in the defendant railroad’s eastbound train. The shafting was 20 to 30 feet long, about 8 inches in diameter, in a box about 12 inches square, and estimated to weigh about 2,000 pounds. The loading was done under the supervision of the agent of the express company, who hired three bystanders to assist the clerk of the express office. The agent was a lady and rendered no assistance beyond her supervision. The shafting was placed on two trucks at right angles to the door of the express car. The deceased was one of those who had hold of the end of the shafting nearest the express car and the others were on either side of the box behind him. While the men were in the act of placing the front end of the shafting in the car door the defendant railroad company suddenly, without warning, started the [266]*266train, moving it up about thirty feet, wbicb made it necessary to change the direction of the shafting. Express packages had been piled on the ground and on that account the truck farthest from the train could not be moved up so as to be at right angles to the door again. The truck nearest the train was moved forward to the express car door in its new position and it was then removed, leaving the front end of the shafting on the shoulders of the four or five men while the other end rested on the extreme corner of the rear truck, where the men bearing the front end and looking towards the car door could not see it. In the attempt to shove the boxed shafting into the car, in this diagonal manner, there was nothing to prevent it rolling off the truck but there would have been if the shafting had been shoved in at right angles. All of the men were near the car door as it naturally required their united strength to lift the front end of the 2,000-pound package. The rear end of the shafting twisted off the rear truck as the change to a diagonal had moved it to the corner of that truck from which it tumbled, falling to the’ ground with great violence. The end nearest to the train bounded upward with such violence that it was forcibly wrested from the shoulders of the men who were carrying it and the deceased, who was in the acute angle nearest the train, was caught between the shafting and the train and his skull smashed causing his death.

The witness Holloway, who was a lumber man with thirty years experience in doing similar work to loading this shafting, testified that the method pursued in attempting to put on the shafting after the moving forward of the car looked so dangerous to him that he was tempted to protest but refrained from doing so for fear he might seem officious. He further testified that when the shafting was first placed for loading at right angles to the train it was squarely on the truck and would not have fallen off, but that in moving the end next to the train after the train had pulled up the further end of the shafting was turned diagonally on the extreme edge of the truck, and no one was there nor any effort made to keep the shafting from falling off. This witness also testified that if the shafting could have again been placed at right angles to the car it could have been loaded with safety because it would not have rolled off the truck. The evidence showed, however, that the express had been piled on the ground in such manner that it was impossible to move the truck around in a suitable position, that is, at right angles to the train. The train was not moved back 30 feet to the original position, thus avoiding the danger of attempting to put the. shafting on in this diagonal manner. The agent of the express company was standing there, and also a clerk in the express office who had hold of the truck handles and could see the position of the rear end of the shafting, but no effort was made to adjust the shafting or place some [267]*267one there to hold it, and it is doubtful if one man could have done this when the movement of the four or five men at the front end would necessarily constantly change the position of the shafting on the rgar track.

The plaintiff also offered to show that the witness Davis, who was clerk of the express company at the time deceased was killed, was employed for the company by Mrs. Thomas, its agent at that station, to assist her. It was error to exclude this, as it tended to show that he was a vice-principal, and as such had charge of loading the shafting, and his conduct in failing to place some one at the rear truck to prevent the falling of the shafting, if found to be negligent, was the negligence of the company and not that of a fellow-servant of the intestate, who was a bystander picked up for the occasion. It was also error to exclude •the testimony that Mrs. Thomas, the agent of the express company, was present superintending the loading of the shafting, for her negligence, if any, in supervising the loading, was also that of the company.

It is not denied that the falling of the shafting from the truck was the immediate cause of the death of the deceased. The witness Holloway, who was present and described very intelligently the whole occurrence, was asked, “From what you observed of it, what caused the shafting to drop from the truck and fall to the ground in the manner you have described?” This was excluded as opinion evidence, which was error, for he was asked to state what he saw. It may be that he would have said that the moving of the train forward causing the diagonal position of the shafting in order to put it on the car caused the falling of the rear end from the truck, or he may have given some other reason. "We do not. know exactly what he would'have said, but the plaintiff was entitled to have the facts laid before the jury that they might have drawn their own inferences as to the cause of the injury. This, therefore, was error as to both the defendants. He was also asked, “State what effect the pulling of this train up some thirty feet, as you describe, had upon the ability of these men to load it upon the car.” He answered, “It put the shafting in a very much more, unsafe position than it was at first.” On motion of the defendant railroad company this answer was stricken out, which was a very material error. This witness without objection had stated that he had had experience for thirty years as a sawmill man in loading timber, and that in his opinion a sufficient number of men were provided to properly load the shaft into the train when the shaft was in the original position, but in the new position, where the thing actually happened, it looked pretty dangerous to him. This was evidence sufficient to go to the jury tending to show negligence of the defendant railroad in suddenly moving the train thirty feet forward and in not moving it back to the original position when the [268]*268shafting bad been properly placed for loading at right angles to the train. The authorities in charge of the train saw the position of the shafting and stopped the car at that point where this witness stated that it could have been safely loaded. The defendant railroad has given no evidence or explanation why the ear was suddenly moved forward nor why it did not move the train back to the original position, though the witness stated that the change of position made the loading very much more unsafe.

There was evidence that the 'express car was something like eight feet wide on the inside and the doors were about five feet wide.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Bruce v. O'Neal Flying Service, Inc.
66 S.E.2d 312 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1951)
State v. . Hauser
164 S.E. 114 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1932)
Stanley v. . Lumber Co
114 S.E. 385 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1922)
Stanley v. Whiteville Lumber Co.
184 N.C. 302 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 S.E. 519, 178 N.C. 264, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnes-v-seaboard-air-line-railroad-nc-1919.