Jenkins v. Southern Railway Co.

59 S.E. 663, 146 N.C. 178, 1907 N.C. LEXIS 20
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 27, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 59 S.E. 663 (Jenkins 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
Jenkins v. Southern Railway Co., 59 S.E. 663, 146 N.C. 178, 1907 N.C. LEXIS 20 (N.C. 1907).

Opinion

OonnoR, J.

The following case is disclosed by the record: On 7 December, 1906, Nissen & Co. delivered to defendant company at Winston-Salem, N. C., one wagon for transportation and delivery to plaintiff at Grover, N. C. The wagon *179 was delivered to plaintiff 12 January, 1907. The distance between the two stations is “more than one hundred and less than two hundred miles.” There was m> testimony tending to “ show the ordinary time required to transport freight from "Winston-Salem to G-rover. Defendant introduced no evidence. Motion for judgment of nonsuit denied. Defendant excepted. This ruling of the Court presents the question whether, the distance between the two points and the time consumed in the transportation being shown, plaintiff is entL tied to have his case submitted to the jury to find whether the freight has been transported within the ordinary time required, etc. We undertook, so far as necessary upon the record, to construe the statute in Stone v. Railroad, 144 N. C., 220. We there held that no other duty was imposed upon the carrier, in regard to the time within which the freight should be transported, than was imposed by the common law. The statute permits the plaintiff to go to the jury, as upon a prima facie case, by showing that the defendant omitted and neglected to transport the freight within the “ordinary time required,” etc. The issue, therefore, in this case, is, Did the defendant transport, etc., within the “ordinary time required” ? The burden of this issue is upon the plaintiff. What is “ordinary time” is a question of law. The Court defines the term, fixes the standard. Whether the transportation is made within such time is a question of fact for the jury. In Stone's case, supra, we found that “ordinary time” is the usual, regular, customary time within which, by the means and facilities in general use for the performance of the duty, the service should be completed. In other words, how long, over defendant’s road, by the use of the locomotive and cars in general use, by the usual schedules of its freight trains used for that purpose, should the defendant have been given to transport this freight? The time actually taken was thirty-five days. If the jury find that this was more than “ordinary time required,” etc., the statute declares such time *180 prima facie unreasonable and imposes the penalty. If the plaintiff failed to introduce evidence tending to show facts from which the jury may find the fact in issue, the Court should have granted the motion for judgment of nonsuit. He failed “to make out his case.” Plaintiff insists that, having shown the distance and the time consumed, the jury may, as a matter of common knowledge, observation and experience, find as a conclusion of fact that more than ordinary time elapsed between the shipment and delivery. The general rule is, that facts in issue must be found by the jury upon testimony introduced in the orderly way .prescribed in judicial procedure. To this rule there is a well-settled exception, the application of which is sometimes difficult. Eor the purpose of this discussion, it may be said that there are certain matters, of which, by reason of common knowledge, observation and experience, the courts take judicial notice. These, “courts may and should notice without proof, and assume as known by others, whatever, as the phase is, everybody knows.” Thayer on Ev., 301. Greenleaf says: “In general, the jury may, in modern times, act only upon evidence properly laid before them in the course of the trial. But so far as the matter in question is one upon which men in general have a common fund of knowledge and experience, the analogy of judicial notice obtains to some extent, and the jury are allowed to resort to this possession in making up their minds. * * * But the scope of this doctrine is narrow and is strictly limited to a few matters of elemental experience in human nature, commercial affairs and evéryday life.” 1 Evidence (16th Ed.), 11. Professor Thayer, discussing the subject, says: “But as the jury is bound to keep within the restrictions imposed upon courts by the principle of judicial notice, so also it has the liberty which that principle allows to courts. The circumstance that the jury is a subordinate tribunal does not change the nature of their office.” Ev., 296; Wigmore Ev., sec. 2565. In Com. v. Peckham, 2 Gray, 514, cited by *181 Professor Thayer, the Judge said: “Jurors, are allowed to act upon matters within their general knowledge, without any testimony on those matters.” Shaw, G. J., said: “The jury may properly exercise their own knowledge and experience in regard to the general subject of inquiry,” being the value of certain goods. It becomes material and of interest to inquire how far the principle, or, speaking Uiore accurately, the exception, has been applied in cases germane to this appeal. In Hipes v. Cochran, 13 Ind., 175, it was said: “We are of the opinion that the fact that the usual route and speed of travel from C. in Indiana to E. in New York is by railroad is a public fact, of which this Court can as well take notice as the route and mode of passing from point to point.”

In Oppenheimer v. Wolf, 3 Sandf. Ch., 571, it was material to fix the date as nearly as possible of the death of one Joseph Wolf, lost in a voyage across the Atlantic. This fact was dependent upon the time ordinarily required to make the trip in vessels of the character of that in which he sailed. The Vice-Chancellor said: “These are facts forming a part of the experience and common knowledge of the day, and, as such, are legitimate grounds for the judgment of the Court.” In Pearce v. Langfit, 101 Pa. St., 507, it is said: “We apprehend that the ordinary speed of railway trains is a matter of judicial cognizance, and hence a very simple computation will demonstrate with approximate certainty the time within which mails may be transported between such cities as New York and Pittsburg.” In Williams v. Brown, 53 App. Div. (N. Y.), 486, Jenhs, says that “the time of railroad travel and transportation of the mails between two cities is less than two days” will be taken notice of by the Court. In Bradford v. Steamship Co., 147 Mass., 55, Holmes, J., says that the jury would be justified in fixing the damage to the goods in controversy “as a matter of common experience.” This Court, in Deans v. Railroad, 107 N. C. 686 (at p. 693), *182 speaking through Mr. Justice. Avery, says: “The jury were at liberty to exercise their common sense and to use the knowledge acquired by their observation and experience in everyday life in solving the question,” in that case, of the distance within which the .engineer could see a man on the track.

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Bluebook (online)
59 S.E. 663, 146 N.C. 178, 1907 N.C. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jenkins-v-southern-railway-co-nc-1907.