Purnell v. Raleigh & Gaston Railroad

29 S.E. 953, 122 N.C. 832, 1898 N.C. LEXIS 361
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 12, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by62 cases

This text of 29 S.E. 953 (Purnell v. Raleigh & Gaston Railroad) 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
Purnell v. Raleigh & Gaston Railroad, 29 S.E. 953, 122 N.C. 832, 1898 N.C. LEXIS 361 (N.C. 1898).

Opinions

Furches, J.:

Plaintiff’s intestate was run over and killed by a freight train of the defendant company, and this is an action for damages.

[834]*834There was evidence tending to sho w th at defendant has, and maintains a large shed, 275 feet long and 80 feet wide in the thickly settled and the business part of the town of Weldon; that under this shed there are as many as five railroad tracks, and the trains and cars of four different roads pass under and through this shed; this shed was used as a depot for these different roads, where they received and discharged their passengers, and was a place of general resort for the inhabitants of the town, and all other persons; that on the night of the 18th of October, 1895, about 9:30, when the passenger train of the Atlantic Coast Line (this being one of the roads that used and occupied the shed) was leaving, the defendant company backed a freight train under this shed, which ran over and killed the plaintiff’s intestate; that it was dark under this shed, which was not lighted except from lamps of the “Coast Line Hotel” and the Coast Line mail and passenger train, composed principally of “sleepers,” which gave little or no light, and which was between the hotel and the defendant’s freight train that killed the intestate of plaintiff, and such light as was reflected from some buildings across the street on the opposite side of the shed from the “Coast Line” Hotel; that defendant’s train was due at 5:30 but was belated until 9:30, and was being pushed backwards at a speed of not more than four miles an hoar, and the intestate had been on the track but a few minutes when he was run over and killed.

The plaintiff contended that there was no light or lantern displayed from the front end of the leading car of the backing train, and that there was no one there acting as flagman or signalman, in charge of the.backing train, as there should have been.

For the purpose of proving these allegations, the [835]*835plaintiff introduced several witnesses who testified that they were there; that it was dark; some of them say it was very dark and they saw no light, nor did they see any one on the car with a light or lantern.

With this evidence, the plaintiff rested his case, and the defendant moved to non-suit him under chapter 109, Acts of 1897, contending that the plaintiff had not made a,prima facie case; that, taking everything to be true, the plaintiff’s evidence proved or tended to prove that plaintiff had failed to show negligence on the part of defendant.

The court refused the motion to dismiss and the defendant excepted, and then proceeded to introduce evidence, and the trial proceeded to verdict and judgment against the defendant.

The defendant contends, now, that the Judge erred in not dismissing the plaintiff’s action at the conclusion of this evidence in chief, and insists that he is entitled to have the court reviewed upon that motion. The plaintiff contended that the court committed no error; that he is not so entitled, and this brings the construction of this statute before us for the first time.

As we understand the practice of the courts before this statute, the defendant might make this motion, but if the court refused it and the defendant offered further evidence, he lost the benefit of that motion. The motion could be renewed at the close of the evidence in the case, but would then depend upon the whole evidence offered in the case. Sugg v. Watson, 101 N. C., 188.

To give this statute the construction contended for by. the plaintiff, would be to make it meaningless, and to leave the law as it was before its passage. This we cannot do. Whether its enforcement will tend to the [836]*836advancement- of justice or to the economy of time, is not for us to say.

The rule it has changed is one of long standing, with the approval of this Court. But it was within the province of the Legislature to change it, and in our opinion it has done so. We must, therefore, hold that the defendant has the right to have the ruling of the court reviewed upon the state of the case as it existed at the time the motion was made.

This brings us to a review of the Judge’s ruling in refusing the defendant’s motion to dismiss the plaintiff’s action at the close of his evidence in chief.

This motion is substantially a demurrer to the plaintiff’s evidence. And this being so, and the court having no right to pass upon the weight of evidence, every fact that plaintiff’s evidence proved or tended to prove must be taken by the court to be proved. It must be taken in the strongest light, as against the defendant.

Then the plaintiff’s evidence proved or tended to prove that the defendant kept and used a shed 275 feet long and 80 feet wide, under which there were five railroad tracks, used in common by defendant with three other railroads; that this shed was the depot for all these roads in receiving and discharging their passengers; that it was not lighted by the defendant, and that it was dark under this shed; that it was a place of common resort for the inhabitants of the town and all other persons; that there was a frequented pass-way across the railroad tracks under this shed, which was used with the knowledge and consent of the defendant; that defendant’s train that killed the intestate of plaintiff was not on schedule time — -was due at 5:30, but did not arrive until 9:30, when the intestate was killed; that this train was backing under this dark shed at a [837]*837rate of speed not greater than four miles an hour, without light, or flagman, or signalman on the front of the leading car of the backing train.

It is true that it was contended by the defendant that plaintiff’s evidence failed to prove — to establish' — the fact that there was no light and no flagman on the front of the leading car; that plaintiff’s witnesses only testified that they were there, that it was dark, and they saw no light or flagman. This was negative but competent evidence. Henderson v. Crouse, 52 N. C., 623. This evidence was competent and not objected to. It was evidently introduced for the purpose of showing— proving that defendant had no light or flagman on the car. If it did not prove this, nor tend to prove it, it was incompetent and should have been objected to by defendant. But if it tended to establish the fact, could the court say that it did not do so ? If it did tend to do so — and this proposition seems too plain to call for authority or argument — it was then no longer a question for the court, but an issue for the jury — the court has no right to pass upon the weight of evidence. Sugg v. Watson, supra.

We have not said and do not say that the evidence introduced by plaintiff established negligence in the defendant. It is not necessary, in the consideration of the Judge’s ruling upon defendant’s motion to dismiss, that we should do so.

But we say the evidence tends to establish the facts as we have stated them, and it then became an issue of fact for the jury and not a question for the court. There was no error in refusing defendant’s motion to dismiss under the Act of 1897.

The discussion of this case so far has been as to the duty of the court under the Act of 1897, chapter 109. [838]*838The discussion has involved the question as to defendant’s negligence.

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Bluebook (online)
29 S.E. 953, 122 N.C. 832, 1898 N.C. LEXIS 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/purnell-v-raleigh-gaston-railroad-nc-1898.