McGhee v. Norfolk & Southern Railway Co.

60 S.E. 912, 147 N.C. 142, 1908 N.C. LEXIS 30
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 18, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 60 S.E. 912 (McGhee v. Norfolk & 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
McGhee v. Norfolk & Southern Railway Co., 60 S.E. 912, 147 N.C. 142, 1908 N.C. LEXIS 30 (N.C. 1908).

Opinions

CoNNOR, J.,

after stating the facts: Taking tbe averments in the complaint to be true, as admitted by tbe demurrer, two questions are presented:

1. Was there a breach of duty to tbe plaintiff on tbe part of tbe defendants ?

2. Was it tbe proximate cause of tbe injury ?

It is said that tbe demurrer admits negligence. The demurrer admits the facts set out, with such inferences to be drawn from them as are most favorable to plaintiff. Tbe law prescribes tbe measure of duty which defendants owe to plaintiff upon tbe facts and tbe inferences to be drawn from them-. A defendant cannot by demurring change tbe law. Stripped of immaterial verbiage, tbe plaintiff says defendants were engaged in constructing a railroad between tbe points named; [145]*145they permitted about 1,600 pounds of dynamite to be kept in a small wooden building along tbe line of their track and near one of the public roads in Craven County, about one mile from the city of New Bern, without any notice or warning to the public that the building contained dynamite. The building was in a public place, where trains were passing. The house appeared to be an old abandoned shanty. Plaintiff was an employee of the Western Union Telegraph Company, was em gaged in constructing a telegraph line, and was living in a camp near the shanty in which the dynamite was stored, of which he had no knowledge. On the’morning of 14 May, 1901, the plaintiff, with a companion, while engaged in shooting at a target, shot at a knot hole in the weatherboarding of the shanty, causing a terrific explosion, whereby he was injured, etc.

Actionable negligence consists in a breach of duty to plaintiff. A public nuisance is actionable only when a private injury is *sustained by plaintiff. “In order to sustain an action, the plaintiff must state and prove facts sufficient to show what the duty is, and that the defendant owes it to him.” Shepherd, J., in Emry v. Nav. Co., 111 N. C., 94. “It has been often pointed out that a person cannot be held liable for negligence unless he owed some duty to the plaintiff and that duty was neglected.” Lane v. Cox, 1 Q. B. D., L. R. (1897), 415. “The duty itself arises out of the various relations of life and varying obligations under different circumstances. In one case the duty is high and imperative; in another it is of imperfect obligation.” In every case wherein negligence causing injury 'is alleged, it becomes necessary to inquire what relation plaintiff bears to defendant. It is impossible to ascertain whether the defendants owe any, and if so what, duty to plaintiff, until the legal relation existing between them in respect to the cause and occasion of the damage is settled. To say that the storing of the dynamite in the place and manner alleged in the complaint is a public nuisance does not in [146]*146any degree affect tbe question or aid us in its settlement. For maintaining a public nuisance tbe defendants are liable to indictment. Tbe citizen can sue only when be sustains special damage — different in kind from tbe public. It is elementary tbat plaintiff bad no cause of action against defendants for placing tbe dynamite in tbe sbanty. He must establish some relation between defendants and bimself from wbicb a duty to bim is imposed upon defendants. “Tbe expression ‘duty’ properly imports a determinate person to whom tbe obligation is owing, as well as tbe one wbo owes tbe obligation. There must be two determinate parties before tbe relationship of obligor and obligee of a duty can exist.” 1 Street Foundations Leg. Liab., 94. Tbe duty grows out of tbe relationship. What relationship existed between plaintiff and defendants at tbe time of and in regard to tbe conditions out of wbicb tbe damage was sustained ? Plaintiff bad a right to pass along tbe public highway and to use tbe public highway as any other citizen. Defendants owed bim tbe duty not to obstruct tbe highway or to place dangerous explosives so near thereto as to endanger bis life or person. For any injury caused by a breach of this duty defendants were liable. Plaintiff bad no right, while passing along tbe highway, to go upon defendants’ premises or to shoot at or into their bouses. He was not in tbe employment of defendants, nor does be pretend tbat be occupied any relation to defendants making bim a licensee, either express or implied. lie says tbat be “was engaged in shooting at a target.” Tbe case then comes to this: Defendants have stored on their right of way, in tbe sbanty, to be used in constructing a railroad, tbe quantity of dynamite named. The' plaintiff commits a trespass upon tbe property by shooting into the bouse, through a knot hole, not knowing tbe dynamite was stored therein. Conceding tbat storing tbe dynamite in tbe sbanty without giving notice constituted a public nuisance, what duty did defendants owe plaintiff, a trespasser upon their premises? It will be ob[147]*147served that he was not attempting to abate the nuisance. The defendants were engaged in- constructing the railroad, hence no question in regard to the right of the public to go upon the right of way is presented. It does not very clearly appear whether, when he shot at the knot hole, plaintiff was on the public highway or on the right of way. It is immaterial where he was standing. Assuming that he stood in the highway, it is manifest that in shooting at the knot hole he was as essentially a trespasser as if he had gone on the right of way or premises and struck the shanty with his pistol. It is clear that, in respect to the cause of the explosion, plaintiff was a trespasser. In Street’s Foundations of Legal Liab. (Vol. I), 155, it is said: “When mischief happens to a trespasser by reason of the defective or dangerous condition of the premises upon which he trespasses, he is very properly held to assume the risk, and no recovery can be had against the keeper of those premises. As it is commonly and somewhat more artificially put, the implied dirty to prevent harm from unsafe premises does not exist in favor of a trespasser.” Zoebisch v. Tarbell, 92 Mass., 385. The view which we find most favorable to plaintiff is thus stated: “The preferable view is believed to be that a party’s liability to trespassers depends upon the former’s contemplation of the likelihood of their presence on the premises and the probability of injury from contact with conditions existing thereon. While, as a rule, a party will not be deemed to anticipate the commission of a willful wrong, yet when, under the circumstances, a technical trespass may reasonably be anticipated the owner of premises will be liable for a failure to take reasonable precautions to prevent injuries to the trespasser.” 21 Am. and Eng. Enc., 473. Adopting this standard of duty, we are imable to perceive how the plaintiff can maintain his action. There is no suggestion that plaintiff or any other person was in the habit of shooting at the house in which the dynamite was stored, or that it was so situated, with reférence to the [148]*148camp in wbicb lie lived, that defendants’ servants knew or had cause to believe that he would “engage in shooting at a target” near the house. To. impose upon defendants the duty of provision to the extent necessary to maintain this action would be burdensome to the owners of property.

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Bluebook (online)
60 S.E. 912, 147 N.C. 142, 1908 N.C. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcghee-v-norfolk-southern-railway-co-nc-1908.