Davis v. Southern Railway Co.

87 S.E. 745, 170 N.C. 582, 1916 N.C. LEXIS 201
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 12, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 87 S.E. 745 (Davis v. Southern Railway Co.) 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
Davis v. Southern Railway Co., 87 S.E. 745, 170 N.C. 582, 1916 N.C. LEXIS 201 (N.C. 1916).

Opinions

ALLEN, J., concurring: CLARK, C. J., dissenting: HOKE, J., concurring in the dissenting opinion. After stating the case: The evidence must be considered in the view most favorable to the plaintiff.

This Court has held so frequently as to have made it an axiom of the law that a person using the track of a railroad company for a footway, whether as trespasser or licensee, does so subject to the undoubted and superior right of the railway company to have the unimpeded use thereof for the operation of its trains, while serving the public in transporting passengers and freight. It is bound by the law to receive passengers and freight and to carry them, by the exercise of care and diligence, to their destination, and, therefore, it is not so much the railroad company which is thus favored and preferred by the law over a trespasser and licensee walking on or dangerously near its tracks, as the *Page 664 public, although the railroad company has, independently, rights and privileges with respect to its tracks and rights of way which are not permitted by the law to be abridged in order to accommodate those who for their own convenience and at their own will and pleasure use them as footways. By reference to the numerous cases upon this subject which have been decided by this Court it will be seen that it has been held positively, unequivocally, and uniformly by us that the principle which gives to the railroad company, while serving the public, this superior and exclusive right to the use of its tracks and its right of way is not in the least modified by anything having reference to the speed of the train.McAdoo v. R. R., 105 N.C. 140; High v. R. R., 112 N.C. 385; Abernathyv. R. R., 164 N.C. 91; Ward v. R. R., 167 N.C. 148, and cases therein cited, or to the fact that it was accustomed to run at a certain speed, nor because it was contrary to usage or custom to run on Sunday, if such was the fact in this case.

A railroad company is not under any legal obligation to regulate the rate of speed of its trains for the convenience of those using its (585) right of way, for its tracks are always places of danger, and the pedestrian, who can easily step aside and avoid any danger, should do so on the approach of a train. He cannot require the company to slow up any more than to stop. He must look out for trains and take care of himself, and the engineer has the right to suppose that he has done so, or that he will do so in time to save himself. He must expect trains at all times, for he does not control the schedules of the company, and, besides, it has the right to run extra trains and to use its tracks for its purposes at any hours it chooses in the transaction of its business as a public carrier, and cannot be lawfully obstructed or impeded in the prosecution of this right or prevented from its free and full exercise in order to take care of those who go upon its property as trespassers or as licensees, who are there by sufferance only. It must not willfully or heedlessly injure them; but as they are not invited upon the right of way in any sense other than that the railroad company had not taken steps to prevent its use by them as a footpath, they are required to look out for their own safety.

Justice Avery, speaking for the Court in High v. R. R., 112 N.C. 385, said: "Whether he saw the plaintiff at a distance of 150 yards or of 10 feet, he was not at fault in acting on the supposition that she would still get out of the way. It is not material whether the train was moving fast or slow in such a case as this. For present purposes the relative condition of the parties would have been the same had the engine been moving 50 miles an hour and had she been discovered on the track at a distance that would be traversed in the same time that would have been consumed in going 10 feet at the rate of 10 miles an hour, unless *Page 665 additional liability should have been incurred by running so fast in a populous town." And again, in the same case: "If the plaintiff had looked and listened for approaching trains as a person using a track for a footway should in the exercise of ordinary care always do, she would have seen that the train, contrary to the usual custom, was moving on the siding. The facts that it was a windy day and that she was wearing a bonnet, or that the train was late, gave her no greater privilege than she would otherwise have enjoyed as licensee, but, on the contrary, should have made her more watchful." He then goes on to say that as the woman was apparently is possession of her normal faculties, and her natural senses of sight and hearing, there was nothing which required the engineer to depart from the usual rule, that the servant of the company is warranted in expecting that trespassers or licensees, seemingly of sound mind and body and in possession of their senses, will leave the place of danger till it is too late for him, by stopping the train or slackening its speed, to prevent a collision, citing especially in support of these propositions, so thoroughly established in our law, the cases of McAdoo v. R. R., 105 N.C. 140; Meredith v. R. R.,108 N.C. 616, and Norwood v. R. R., 111 N.C. 236. In other (586) words, it was held that if the mental and physical condition of the person on the track is such as to indicate that he is capable of caring for himself, the engineer is under no duty or obligation to take care of him by even slowing down his engine; and Justice Avery, in High's case, distinguishes from it those of Deans v. R. R., 107 N.C. 686 (where the man was lying apparently helpless on the track); Bullock v. R. R.,105 N.C. 180 (where the horse and wagon had stalled on the track and a signal given to stop), and Clark v. R. R., 109 N.C. 430 (where the party was handicapped by being on a trestle); but in all cases where the person on the right of way is not helpless, or disabled in some way, the above rule applies with its full force.

In Abernathy v. R. R., 164 N.C. 97 and 98, the Court, quoting, in part, from and approving Glenn v. R. R., 128 N.C. 184, said: "The railroad track itself was a warning of danger, made imminent by the approaching train. It was then his duty to keep his `wits' about him and to use them for his own safety. He knew or ought to have known that he was a trespasser, and it was his duty to have gotten out of the way of the train. The defendant was under no obligation to stop its train at the sight of a man on its track. . . . It was apparent to the engineer that the plaintiff was in full possession of his faculties and could take care of himself, and the engineer had the right to presume that he would leave the track in time to avoid the injury. `That he did not do so was his own fault, and he should suffer the consequences of his folly.' The doctrine of the cases already cited and decided in this *Page 666 Court has been firmly established in other jurisdictions, and notably in R.R. v. Houston, 95 U.S. 697

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Bluebook (online)
87 S.E. 745, 170 N.C. 582, 1916 N.C. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-southern-railway-co-nc-1916.