Meredith v. . Cranberry Coal and Iron Company

5 S.E. 659, 99 N.C. 576
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 5 S.E. 659 (Meredith v. . Cranberry Coal and Iron Company) 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
Meredith v. . Cranberry Coal and Iron Company, 5 S.E. 659, 99 N.C. 576 (N.C. 1888).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

The plaintiff, an employee of the defendant company, at per diem wages, while engaged in transporting; wood, to be converted into coal, from the forest to the wood-yard over a tramway constructed for that purpose, was struck, with a stick of wood, protruding from a loaded car, and! thrown from the platform on which he was standing, and! suffered the injury for which compensation is demanded in the present action. The complaint alleges, that this was brought about by the cording or packing of the wood too near the tramway, and on either side of it, as directed by one Allen Nimson, a manager and middle man, representing the company in the operation of this department of the work, by reason of which proximity, a loose stick, slipping from the load on a passing car, came in contact with that packed, and in its rebound knocked the plaintiff off, and caused the injuries complained of.

The answer denies the charge of negligence, in placing the wood where it was stacked, denies that Nimson was such representative of the company, and insists that the primary and direct cause of the accident, was the negligent packing of the wood on the car and its too rapid running, causing the load to jostle and some of the sticks to slip out of place, to prevent which, the plaintiff imprudently seized one of them; and that in all this packing and transporting, the plaintiff participated with his associate fellow-workmen.

The issues deduced from the conflicting allegations contained in the pleadings and submitted by the Court to the jury, were:

*578 1. Was the plaintiff’s injury caused by the negligence of the defendant? To which the response was, Yes.

2. Did the plaintiff contribute to his own injury by negligence on his part ? Answer — No.

3. What damage has plaintiff sustained by reason of defendant’s negligence ? Answer — Five thousand dollars.

The defendant, besides a similar issue as to the amount of •damages, in place of the two first, proposed the three following, which wTere refused:

1. Did the defendant cause the wood to be so negligently packed on the side of the track of the tramroad as to make it hazardous for the loaded tram car to pass ?

2. Was the plaintiff guilty of negligence, in not using ordinary care and prudence in running the tram car so as to .avoid danger?

3. Was the plaintiff a fellow-servant with Allen Nimson?

The facts disclosed in the testimony, heard at the trial, so far as they are necessary to elucidate the matter on which the determination of the defendant’s appeal rests, are, in substance, the following:

The wood was cut and brought from the forest, a mile distant from the place of deposit in the yard, on flat cars, each carrying a cord, passing over a tram or railway, on an inclined plane, and descending by force of gravitation, the speed being controlled by breaks on each. At the time of the accident, the train consisted of two loaded cars, upon the rear platform of the foremost of which, the plaintiff was .standing. The train was moving with unusual rapidity, •and several sticks of the wood on a car were jostled and began to slide, to prevent which, the plaintiff, being called on to do so by one Bass, a fellow-servant, at the lower end of the nearest car, stepped on the adjoining platform of that car, and seized a loose stick, with the intention of replacing it, and in doing so, the stick came in contact with the stacked wood, and the other end struck the plaintiff with great vio *579 lence and threw him to the ground. While prostrated, he sustained the injury mentioned. The placing and stacking the wood so near the tramway was done by the express order of said Nimson, to whose charge and management the business was confided by the defendant, and his co-laborers in the work of transportation, as was the loading of the cars and accompanying them to the place of unloading, but it does not appear that any instructions were given as to the manner of putting up the wood, or supervision exercised over the work as it progressed.

It was no uncommon thing, as the plaintiff himself testifies, for the wood on the car to be so disturbed by jarring of the car in motion, and if not going too fast, it was not hazardous to arrest it, and retain it in place, in the manner attempted in this case. It was, if the car was going rapidly. A witness for the defendant, John Ellis, who graded the track, and had been connected with the road for 83 years, after describing the declivity of it, and its passing between the stacks on either 'side of the yard, testified to having cautioned the plaintiff, perhaps as many as twenty times, about running too fast, and told him that some of the men would be killed if they came down so rapidly, and that sometimes, when himself riding on the cars, he would enjoin it on the employees to run slowly.

They were expected to make eight trips a day, and lacked one of completing the number at the hour 3 P. M., on Saturday, when the plaintiff was hurt.

Allen Nimson, examined for the defendant, also testified to his warning repeatedly when riding on the cars, and when passing them in motion cautioned the hands in charge, the plaintiff among them, against fast running, and that the plaintiff had been in this employment from one and a half to two years.

There was a general concurrence of opinion among the witnesses, and especially among those of skill and experi *580 ence, in the defendant’s service, who were introduced by it, that cars could, when so loaded, be run with safety, if run slowly, and little, if any, hazard would be incurred in restoring slipping pieces to their proper place by hand; but it would be otherwise, if the cars were moving at a rapid rate. Whether the cars were moving at an increased speed on this occasion, the evidence was somewhat in conflict, but none that they moved slowly.

There was much testimony as to the powers conferred upon Nimson, and exercised by him for, and in place of, the company, and whether the legal effect was to lift him above the sphere of co-servant, to the place of their common principal, in his relation to them, which we do not reproduce, as our decision of the case rests upon other grounds.

The issues tendered for the defendant eliminate more distinctly, in our opinion, the subject-matter of controversy presented in the pleadings, than do those adopted by the Court; but the instructions to the jury, upon them, raised every defence available to the defendant under the others. Its responsibility was made to depend upon actual negligence of its own, the distinction pointed out when it proceeds from a fellow-servant, and when it proceeds from one who, as a middle man, assumes the relation of his principal towards subordinate employees, the absence of contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff, all which enter into the question of the defendant’s liability for damages.

But we do not think that the concurring agency of the plaintiff, as involving a want of care and prudence on his part, was, upon the evidence, with sufficient distinctness presented to the jury.

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Bluebook (online)
5 S.E. 659, 99 N.C. 576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meredith-v-cranberry-coal-and-iron-company-nc-1888.