McCormick v. Columbia Electric Street Railway, Light & Power Co.

67 S.E. 562, 85 S.C. 455, 1910 S.C. LEXIS 273
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 7, 1910
Docket7538
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 67 S.E. 562 (McCormick v. Columbia Electric Street Railway, Light & Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCormick v. Columbia Electric Street Railway, Light & Power Co., 67 S.E. 562, 85 S.C. 455, 1910 S.C. LEXIS 273 (S.C. 1910).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Hydrick.

This is an appeal from a judgment recovered by plaintiff for personal injuries, caused by collision with one of defendant’s cars. Plaintiff was driving a covered dairy wagon along Elmwood avenue, in the city of Columbia, on which defendant’s track is laid, and was approaching the track obliquely to cross at its intersection with Lincoln street. He heard the noise and signals of a car, coming up behind him, looked and saw it, and checked his horse to let it pass. Immediately after it passed, he started across the track and was struck by another car, which was following the first. The testimony was con- *457 flirting as to the distance between these cars. Some of the plaintiff’s witnesses said they were within one hundred feet of each other. Others said they were running very close together and very rapidly. A rule of the company provides: “Except when closing up at terminals or junctions, cars in the same direction must be spaced at least two hundred feet.” There was testimony that the car which struck plaintiff was running from ten to twelve miles an hour; that the track was wet and slippery from recent rains; that no signals of its approach were given, though the motorman and conductor saw plaintiff several hundred yards ahead, but did not think he was going to cross. The motorman said he did not apply the brakes till he saw plaintiff start across the track, about sixty feet ahead of the car; that, at the speed he was running a car could be stopped within about one hundred feet, but not within two hundred feet, if the track is wet and slippery. The conductor said it could be stopped within a car length — thirty or forty feet. Some of the witnesses said the car ran half a block after it struck plaintiff’s wagon, though the motorman said he did all in his power to stop it before the collision, and that he did stop it within a car length after the collision. The conductor said it was the duty of the motorman to slow down if he saw a vehicle approaching the track at a crossing, and he did not know whether or not it would attempt to cross.

1 The first exception is that it was error to admit in evidence the rule of the company requiring cars to be spaced two hundred feet, except at terminals or junctions; because it did not appear that plaintiff knew of the existence of the rule, and relied upon it in regulating his conduct, and because it was intended only for the guidance of defendant’s employees in the operation of its cars.

Though it has been the common practice in this State, in cases like this, tQ admit in evidence the rules of the company, governing the conduct of its employees, and the move *458 ments of its trains and cars, this is the first time their admissibility has been presented to this Court for decision.

In other jurisdictions, the authorities are in conflict. The argument against the admission of the rules, unless they are known to the person injured, and he relied upon them in regulating his conduct, or unless a custom has grown up, based upon the assumption that they will be obeyed, is most strongly stated in Fonda v. St. Paul City Ry. Co., 71 Minn., 438; 70 Am. St. Rep., 341, and in Isaacson v. Duluth St. Ry. Co., another Minnesota case, reported in 77 N. W., 433.

It is that the corporation cannot, by the adoption of rules, fix the standard of its duty to the public. That is fixed by the law. The rules may require more or less than the law requires, yet the rights of the parties must be determined by the law. Again, to admit the rules on the ground that they are tantamount to an admission that reasonable care requires the exercise of the precautions therein prescribed, in effect, holds those whose rules require a higher degree of care for the protection of the public to a stricter liability than those whose rules require a less degree of care; and such a course tends to make it advantageous for such corporations to have no rules at all, whereas they should be encouraged to adopt such rules as they may think proper, out of abundance of caution for their own protection, and for the protection of the public.

The argument is plausible, but we think the fallacy of it lies in the failure to distinguish between evidence, which tends to establish a fact, and the law, which determines the rights of the parties, under the facts established. While it is true, a plaintiff in such cases, sues for the violation of a duty imposed by law, and not for the violation of the rules adopted by the master for the guidance of his servants in the discharge of their duties to him, and of his duties to the public, still the disobedience of those, rules may tend to show failure in the discharge of the master’s duties to the *459 public, imposed by law. It should be presumed that a jury will hold the master to no greater or no less liability than is imposed by the law, as declared to them by the Court, without regard to the rules of the master for the guidance of his servants, whether they require more or less than the law requires. The servant is presumed to know the rules of his master, and it is his duty to obey them. Therefore, disobedience of them may be an important factor in determining his mental attitude in the discharge not only of his duties to his master, but also of his master’s duties to the public.

Amongst the primary duties and obligations which railway corporations assume by the acceptance of their charters, is the operation of their roads under such conditions, and in such manner as to afford reasonable protection to the general public, at least within the limits prescribed by law. This imposes upon them the correlative duty to adopt and enforce reasonable rules tending to that end. The failure to do so might be shown as evidence of negligence by omission, for negligence lies in omission as well as in commission in failing to do what reasonable prudence requires, as well as in doing what it forbids. It is inconceivable that a railway corporation could conduct a business so varied and complex without the adoption of suitable rules and regulations for the guidance of its employes.

Moreover, the Court cannot say that the rule in question was adopted solely for the guidance of the employees of the company in protecting themselves and its property. It may have been intended also for the protection of passengers against injury by collision of the cars with each other, and pedestrians and others against collision with the cars in crossing the track. But, even if we assume that it was intended solely for the guidance of the employees, that cannot help the defendant’s case, for its violation was evidence tending to show negligence on the part of the employees in charge of the car, and the evidence tended to show its *460 breach contributed to the plaintiff’s injury. Such rules are held admissible in Lyman v. Boston etc. R. R. (N. H.), 11 L. R. A., 364; Chicago Ry. v. Krayenbuhl, 65 Neb., 889, 59 L. R. A., 920; Lake Shore etc. v. Ward (Ill.), 26 N. E., 520; Railroad Co. v. Williams, 74 Ga., 723, reaffirmed in Atlanta Con. St. Ry. Co. v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 S.E. 562, 85 S.C. 455, 1910 S.C. LEXIS 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccormick-v-columbia-electric-street-railway-light-power-co-sc-1910.