Hamilton v. . R. R.

158 S.E. 75, 200 N.C. 543, 1931 N.C. LEXIS 383
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 1, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 158 S.E. 75 (Hamilton v. . R. R.) 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
Hamilton v. . R. R., 158 S.E. 75, 200 N.C. 543, 1931 N.C. LEXIS 383 (N.C. 1931).

Opinion

In speaking of the Southern Railway Company, it will be referred to as the "Southern" and the Seaboard Air Line Railway Company, as the "Seaboard."

This is an action in the final analysis for actionable negligence, brought by plaintiff against the defendants as joint tort-feasors. The plaintiff contends that there was a track at Franklin, Va., in the shape of a semi-circle, connecting the two defendants' railroads that has *Page 546 parallel lines, known as an "exchange track." The main line of the Southern was on the east side and the Seaboard on the west. That this "exchange track" was used for the purpose of transferring cars from the Southern to the Seaboard track, or from the Seaboard to the Southern track. That on 27 October, 1913, there was a contract entered into in full force at the time of plaintiff's injury, between said defendant railroads. The contract, in part, reads: "(4) The portions of said track a joint interest in which is hereby conveyed aggregating 1,679 feet. . . . That each party hereto shall have equal rights with the other in and to the use of said portions of said track so to be jointly owned and operated hereunder, as aforesaid, but shall so use the same. as to cause the least practicable interference with, interruption of, danger or delay to, the operating of the other party hereto thereupon." The maintenance is to be paid half by each. Provision is made in the joint contract as to liability for damages: "(7) That the responsibility of the parties hereto, as between themselves, for the defense or payment of any and all claims, demands, suits, judgments or sums of money to any person accuring for loss, injury or damage, however resulting, either to person or estate, and arising by reason of, or in connection with the joint use by the parties hereto of the said tracks, as aforesaid, shall be distributed as follows, that is to say"; etc. "(b) When the proximate cause of any such damage shall be negligence to which employees of both parties hereto shall have contributed, then each party hereto shall bear all loss incident to any injury to, or damage of its own property; but the responsibility for all loss or damage accruing to employees or third persons or corporations, not parties hereto, by reason of such concurrent negligence, shall be borne by the parties hereto in equal contribution."

On 10 December, 1927, and for about six months prior thereto, the plaintiff was in the employ of the Seaboard on this "exchange track" as car inspector and repairman, and also working for the Southern as repairman. The Seaboard paid him, but inferentially the Southern contributed to his pay. Freight that was to be transferred to the Southern would go over the connecting tracks, also freight to be transferred to the Seaboard. Between the two was a State highway grade crossing. Between the Seaboard tracks and the highway was the car inspector's shanty used by plaintiff.

Plaintiff testified, in part: "They used this connection track for other purposes, they put cars in there for the Seaboard to pick up, and they would put cars in there for the Southern to pick up the next day, and for moving cars from the Southern to the Seaboard and back. It was used for repairing brakes. I went to work at Franklin, Va., in July, 1927, and was constantly employed there from that time until I was *Page 547 injured. . . . We repaired cars there every day on this track; when a train came in and there was something wrong with the car I would get the car and repair it. I had nothing to do with the placing of cars on the track. I made repairs to those bad order cars coming in. I made repairs on that track all the time I was there. Southern trains usually came in on that connection track anywhere between 10:45 and 11:00 o'clock to pick up cars; the passenger train was due at 10:58. On 10 December, 1927, the train came in from the Southern on the connection track between 9:15 and 9:30 in the morning. I had never seen it there as early as that before. It was a switcher out of Portsmouth. . . . Q. During your entire employment there what was the custom and practice with respect to making light repairs to freight cars? (Objection by defendants; overruled. Defendants except.) A. The custom and practice was to repair them at different places wherever it was convenient; around the yard limits where it was convenient, and I repaired some over the river and some on this connection track and in different places. . . . My tools were in the shanty. I had nothing to do with the movement of cars. On the morning of 10 December, 1927, I was applying a brake shoe on a Southern car on the connection track, located just a few steps from the shanty toward the highway, and I think it was east. It was toward the Southern track. That car was placed there about five minutes before I went to repair it. Before I made repairs to it, itwas not in safe condition for movement. It had a defective brake. . . . I was working on the end of the car in the opposite direction from which the Southern train came. It would be hard to see a train coming from the Southern to the Seaboard because there is a big bank on the inside of the curve. . . . Q. State whether or not you had repaired cars on this connection track for the period of time you had worked prior to 10 December, 1927? A. Yes. Q. What was the custom of the crew of the Southern when they would come in the connection track to get cars from the Seaboard for the Southern? A. It was customary for the trains to come into the connection track and stop before coupling to the cars and for a member of the Southern crew to get down on the ground and look around the car and see if it was ready for the Southern to move it. Q. State whether or not that had been the custom during the entire time you had worked there for the Southern and the Seaboard? (Objection by defendants; overruled. Defendant except.) A. Yes. . . . I was working on the end of the car nearest the shanty, replacing a brake shoe. I was connecting a brake under the car. I was facing the car, I had to put a brake shoe in and that is next to the wheel on the inside, and the old shoe was worn out, and to apply the new one I had to disconnect the brake under the car, and I got a new shoe in and stepped back underneath to reconnect *Page 548 the brakes. There is a piece of casting that extends toward the end, and there is a lever piece to the casting, and there are several places where you tighten them. I earned around $145.00 per month at this place. I did not have any notice or warning of any kind that any car or train was coming over that connection track during that hour? I did not ever, at any time, see that train or car come in over that track from the Southern end at that hour of the day. . . . I was performing my services like I had been and making the light running repairs. This was the kind of repair that I was required to make. Replacing parts is a light repair. Performing the service I was performing required me to be in the position that I was in at the time referred to. While I was engaged in the performance of my duties the Southern from the other end came in over this track and hit the car that I was working on and knocked me up under it and dragged me, squeezed me and mashed me at the same time. Q. State whether or not any signal was given of the approach of that train? A. No; I never heard a sound of it. I never heard a sound of any signal. I had no knowledge of the approach of the train until the collision occurred. Wedges under the wheel were holding the car stationary upon which I was working, sufficient to keep it from moving of its own volition. It was a hard blow, and it was knocked the length of the car, and I couldn't get out, and give an alarm that I was hurt.

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Bluebook (online)
158 S.E. 75, 200 N.C. 543, 1931 N.C. LEXIS 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamilton-v-r-r-nc-1931.