Lineberry Ex Rel. Lineberry v. North Carolina Railway Co.

123 S.E. 1, 187 N.C. 786, 1924 N.C. LEXIS 401
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMay 21, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 123 S.E. 1 (Lineberry Ex Rel. Lineberry v. North Carolina 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
Lineberry Ex Rel. Lineberry v. North Carolina Railway Co., 123 S.E. 1, 187 N.C. 786, 1924 N.C. LEXIS 401 (N.C. 1924).

Opinion

Clarkson, J.

The court below, upon motion of defendant, rendered judgment of nonsuit against the plaintiff, and the plaintiff excepted, assigned error, and appealed to this Court.'

The evidence of plaintiff, John Scott Lineberry, was as follows:

“My father’s name is W. L. Lineberry. Little folks go to the Bad Man if they don’t tell the truth. I am 11 years old now, and was about 9 years old when my leg got injured. That has been about two years ago, and happened on a day about half-past 3 o’clock, while I was on my way home from school. I was near the railroad. Clay Qualls pushed me into ’the train. I was crossing the railroad at the 'hosiery *790 mill. I bad crossed it there before. The bill is steep there — I mean, it is steep to go up from the railroad. There were two other boys with me that evening — Mr. Moore’s boy and Mr. Qualls’ boy — one of them about my size. There was a train coming while I was standing there at the track, about 5 feet from the track. The train passed. I saw the engine. It was a freight train. We were not playing in the cut. I was sliding down the bank the other evening, but not that evening. I got hurt when he pushed me into the train and cut my leg off. I do not know how long. I have been going to school something like three years before that. I had not been going across the railroad at this place very long. I live across the railroad, up there on the north side of the railroad. Do not know how long I have been living here. I did not go to school every day that way. The school was on the south, and I lived on the north side.”

On cross-examination, he said: “The schoolhouse is on the street that goes by the Mebane Bedding Company. This street goes across the railroad track and is an open street across there. Clay Qualls and Eloyd Moore were with me. I do not know that we three boys were the same age. We played together. We started up the street that goes by the Durham Hosiery Mills. The engine had done passed when we got to the Durham Hosiery Mill, and the train was going down the track. That was before I got to the cut. We went by the Durham Hosiery Mills. There is a street in front of the mill, along the railroad track, that goes the same way the railroad track goes. We crossed that street and then went down the side of the embankment where the train was going. Olay Qualls went with me, and Eloyd Moore stopped at the hosiery mill. After we got there and saw the train going by, we went on down into the cut, where the ¡train was. I did not go near the train; I went about 5 feet from the bank down there. After we went down the bank, we had to cross the sidetrack before we got to the main track, and the train was on the main track. We crossed the sidetrack and went near where the train was going, on the main line. We went within about 2 feet of the train. Then Clay Qualls pushed me under the train, and my foot was cut off. The caboose passed pretty quick after I got hurt; the rear end was not far from me when I was pushed. It was a long train. In going to school we frequently went across at the Mebane Bedding Company crossing. I have seen other children crossing there.”

Shelley Hoskins testified, in part: “I work at the brickyard. In April, 1921, I worked for Mr. J. W. Nicholson, at Mebane. On the afternoon of the 13th of April, when this boy was injured, I had been out to Mr. Nicholson’s farm to get some hay, and at the time this accident occurred I was right there at the railroad crossing, on the south side. I was sitting on top of a load of hay. I could'see the railroad *791 track. I was standing right opposite the track. My team was beaded towards the station. The train was going towards the station- — going-east. I saw this little boy at the time the locomotive of the train passed tbe point where the pathway that has been described crossed the railroad. This little boy and two or three more little boys came right up to the cut. They got there just about the time the engine got there, and I think him and another one or two started down the bank, and 1 seen one little hoy give him a, shove, and just as they give him a shove he ran across the sidetrack and slipped, some way, and I seen him fall under the train. . . . After the engine passed, I saw two or three boys go down the embankment. Yes, the engine just had gone by. The train was on the main line. The pass-track was between the embankment, where these children went down the main track. They had to pass over the pass-track before they got to the train. About the time he got on the pass-track he gave him a push and he kind of fell over. At that time, I reckon, the train was about half by.”

E. T. Carr testified, in part: “All classes, both children and adults, use the pathway — mostly children, I would say — children going to school. The school is about three city blocks. I have seen -children playing up and down the banks.”

J. P. Cates testified, in part: “I cannot say for certain how long this particular path has been across the railroad at that place — ever since I have been in Mebane — about ten years. People use this path every day. Yes, it is used by children going and coming from school. I have seen children playing around and running across and running down one' bank and up the other across the track. I have seen children there when the trains were there.”

The evidence, succinctly taken, in a light most favorable to plaintiff, on the motion, of nonsuit, was that the plaintiff, John Scott Lineberry, was returning from school about 3 :30 o’clock in the evening, and was seriously injured by the defendant’s train on the main line, cutting his leg off. Children going to school used the pathway and'played up and down the banks. The freight train was running through the town of Mebane about twenty-five miles an hour. The town ordinance did not permit a greater rate of speed than fifteen miles an hour. Lineberry was about 9 years old and had been going to school about three years. The boys were in the habit of going along the railroad to school through the cut. The day of the injury Lineberry was not playing in the cut at the place he was injured. He had not been going across the railroad very long. He lived on the north side of the railroad, and the school was on the south side. At the time of the injury the train had passed him and was going down the track. He and Clay Qualls went down the side of the embankment where the train was going, and went down into ■ *792 tbe cut where the train was. He did not go near the train, but went about 5 feet from the bank; before he could get to the main track, that the train was on, he had to cross a sidetrack.

The young lad said: “We crossed the sidetrack and went near where the train was going, on the main line. We went within about two feet of the train. Then Clay Qualls pushed me under the train, and my foot was cut off."

Shelley Hoskins testified: “I think him and another one or two started down the bank, and I seen one little boy give him a shove, and just as-they give him a shove he ran across the sidetrack and slip>ped, some way, and I seen him fall under the train. . . . About the time he got on the pass-track he gave him a push and he kind of fell over. At that time, I reckon, the train was about half by.”

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Bluebook (online)
123 S.E. 1, 187 N.C. 786, 1924 N.C. LEXIS 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lineberry-ex-rel-lineberry-v-north-carolina-railway-co-nc-1924.