Edge v. Atlantic Coast Line Railway Co.

153 N.C. 212
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 19, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 153 N.C. 212 (Edge v. Atlantic Coast Line 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
Edge v. Atlantic Coast Line Railway Co., 153 N.C. 212 (N.C. 1910).

Opinions

Hoke, J.

There was allegation with testimony on part of plaintiff tending to show that on or about 28 September, 1908, plaintiff was in employ of defendant company on its yards at South Eocky Mount, N. C., as “handy man or messenger,” and in the line of his duty was sent by his foreman or boss, with urgent directions to hurry, to the storeroom or roundhouse of defendant with a requisition for a keg of nuts or bolts. • The path to the roundhouse led over the tracks of defendant company and on one of these tracks and across the path was a line of box cars, 18 in number, coupled together, five of them being towards a switching engine, detached and some ten feet ahead. That as plaintiff approached, this engine was standing still with a little smoke showing, with a man in the cab, looking towards plaintiff. That plaintiff, as he came to the train of cars, attempted to pass under the drawheads of the cars across the path, and while he was in this position “of peril,” the switching engine, without signal or warning of any kind, backed against the cars, shovipg them along about half a car length and causing serious injury to plaintiff. So far as appears there was nothing to obstruct the view, and, speaking more directly to the question presented, the plaintiff testified: “There was a line of box cars, [214]*214about 18, across tbe path leading to tbe roundhouse, and I looked towards tbe engine to see if I saw any one. Tbe engine was not connected witb tbe ears, but about 10 feet ahead of them standing still, etc. I was walking along whistling — saw a man sitting in tbe window of tbe engine, be bad bis bead right towards me, and afterwards I got between tbe cars going on towards tbe other side when tbe engine struck tbe cars and knocked me,” etc. And again, “Don’t know tbe engineer. He was looking towards me witb bis cap pulled down in front of bis face; I did not bear any signal at all,” etc. “When tbe cars struck I was crawling under tbe drawbeads between tbe cars.”

On this testimony, or on facts of similar import, we have held in tbe case of Beck v. R. R., 149 N. C., p. 168, “That it was a negligent act on tbe part of plaintiff in endeavoring to pass between these cars standing as they were on a live track and witb an engine sufficiently near as to make its approach probable and such conduct would bar a recovery unless after tbe peril was developed there was a negligent failure on tbe part of defendant company to avail itself of tbe last clear chance to avoid tbe injury. In such case tbe prior negligence of plaintiff would not be contributory because it would not be tbe proximate or concurrent cause of tbe injury. Speaking to this question in Sawyer’s case, 145 N. C., p. 29, tbe Court said: “A negligent act of tbe plaintiff does not become contributory unless tbe proximate cause of tbe injury; and, although tbe plaintiff, in going on tbe track, may have been negligent, when be was struck down and rendered unconscious by a bolt of lightning bis conduct as to what transpired after that time was no longer a factor in tbe occurrence, and, as all tbe negligence imputed to defendant on tbe first issue arose after plaintiff was down and helpless, tbe responsibility of defendant attached because it negligently failed to avail itself of tbe last clear chance to avoid tbe injury; so its negligence became tbe sole proximate cause of tbe injury; and tbe act of tbe plaintiff in going on tbe track, even though negligent in tbe first instance, became only tbe remote and not tbe proximate or concurrent cause.” And on this doctrine of tbe last clear chance, in tbe recent case of Snipes v. Manufacturing Co., 152 N. C., pp. 42 and 46, this Court said: “Ordinarily, [215]*215eases calling for application of tbe doctrine indicated arise when tbe injured person was down on tbe track, apparently unconscious or helpless, as in Sawyer’s case, just referred to, or in Pickett’s case, 117 N. C., 616, or in Dean’s case, 107 N. C., 687; but sucb extreme conditions are not at all essential, and tbe ruling should prevail whenever an engineer operating a railroad train does or, in proper performance of bis duty, should observe that a collision is not improbable, and that a person is in sucb a position of peril, that ordinary effort on bis part will not likely avail to save him from injury; and tbe authorities are also to tbe effect that an engineer in sucb circumstances should resolve doubts in favor of tbe safer course.”

This doctrine, here termed and referred to as tbe last clear chance, meaning responsibility arising by reason of a negligent failure of a defendant to avail himself of tbe last clear chance of avoiding tbe injury, is very firmly implanted in our law and tbe duty and tbe breach of it, upon which it is properly made to rest, has been illustrated and applied in many recent decisions of tbe Court, as in Farris’ case, 151 N. C., pp. 483, 491; Lassiter’s case, 133 N. C., pp. 244, 247; Arrowood’s case, 126 N. C., pp. 629, 362; Powell’s case, 125 N. C., p. 374; Purnell’s case, 122 N. C., p. 832; Stanley’s case, 120 N. C., p. 514; Lloyd’s case, 118 N. C., p. 1010; Deans’ case, 107 N. C., 687; Bullock’s case, 105 N. C., pp. 180, 198.

Thus in tbe well considered case of Farris, Administrator, v. the R. R., where a railroad company bad negligently killed an employee who was walking along tbe track about tbe place of a yard crossing, and who bad grabbed for bis bat, which bad suddenly blown from bis bead on or towards tbe track and causing tbe employee to grab for tbe bat and thus expose himself to danger, Associate Justice Manning delivering tbe opinion, and, in reference to tbe question we are discussing, said: “Tbe defendants objected to bis Honor’s submitting tbe third issue— that issue presenting tbe “last clear chance.” While this issue has become immaterial, in view of tbe finding of the jury on £he first and second issues, we think it was proper for bis Honor to have submitted it. If tbe jury bad found with defendants on tbe second issue, having found tbe first issue with plaintiff, the [216]*216ultimate liability o£ defendants would have been determined by tbeir finding on tbe third issue. In tbe presence of tbe concurring negligence of a plaintiff and a defendant, it is a generally accepted doctrine, and well settled in this State, that tbe ultimate liability must depend upon whether tbe defendant could at tbe time have avoided tbe injury by tbe exercise of reasonable care, under tbe attendant circumstances. Ray v. R. R., 141 N. C., 84; Read v. R. R., 140 N. C., 146; Lassiter v. R. R., 133 N. C., 244; Arrowood v. R. R., 126 N. C., 629; Pickett v. R. R., 117 N. C., 616.” In LassitePs case, supra, a railroad conductor of a freight train, in tbe performance of bis duty on a railroad yard bad negligently stepped up on a side track where some shifting was going on, and was run over by a shifting engine pushing some cars backwards on tbe side track referred to, and it appeared that tbe engineer on tbe cab could not bave seen tbe conductor, and there was no one in position to keep a lookout, and there was no evidence that tbe bell was not ringing or tbe whistle not sounding, and it was held to be an issue on tbe last clear chance; and Associate Justice Montgomery, in tbe opinion, said: “It is tbe duty of railroad companies to keep a reasonable lookout on moving trains.

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Bluebook (online)
153 N.C. 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edge-v-atlantic-coast-line-railway-co-nc-1910.