Styles v. Receivers of Richmond & Danville Railroad

24 S.E. 740, 118 N.C. 1084
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 24 S.E. 740 (Styles v. Receivers of Richmond & Danville 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
Styles v. Receivers of Richmond & Danville Railroad, 24 S.E. 740, 118 N.C. 1084 (N.C. 1896).

Opinions

Avery, J.:

The court instructed the jury that; “ if the plaintiff stepped from the track on to the embankment in time to avoid a collision with the train and the-bank gave way on account of being loose dirt which had slid into the road'from time to time, and been permitted to remain on the bed, then the giving away of the bank would be the proximate cause of the injury, and the defendant would be liable in damages for the injury.”' This portion of the charge being excepted to, the question is presented whether, if we concede that the defendant was negligent in allowing the loose earth which had fallen down from the sides of the cut and extended to the margin of the track at this particular place to remain there, and also that the plaintiff had been careless in coming-back into the cut before the west-bound train passed, the mere fact that the plaintiff stepped upon the loose earth in time to avoid collision, if it had not given way, would [1086]*1086render the defendant liable whether the engineer saw, or could or could not by reasonable care have seen him, in time to stop the train, and'notwithstanding the latter’s previous want of care. The defendant did not have the last clear chance under any definition of the rule given by this Court, unless he could, by keeping a proper lookout, have seen, the plaintiff’s condition in time, with the appliances at his command, to have stopped the train andprevented the injury. The leaving of the earth in the cut was a fact accomplished, and, if the plaintiff went into the cut contrary to the command of his superior, (the section boss,) he was guilty of contributory and concurrent negligence. This instruction was not conditioned in any way upon the question whether the jury found that the plaintiff was negligent, or whether the want of care on the part of the defendant intervened as an operative cause after his carelessness. So that, though the jury may have reached the conclusion that the plaintiff went back into the cut contrary to orders, and also that the engineer could not, by the exercise of ordinary care, have discovered his perilous position after he took refuge on the pile of loose earth, they were still required, under this instruction, to find for the plaintiff upon the question of proximate cause. Was the plaintiff guilty of contributory negligence if he disobeyed express orders in returning into the cut before the west-bound train had passed through ? The west-bound train was already an hour late, and the order of his superior, if the jury believed the testimony of the section boss, required the plaintiff to remain east of the cut till the train passed. Any instruction as to what was the proximate cause must have been given in full view of the possibility that the jury might believe the testimony of the section master. If he was believed, the order contemplated that [1087]*1087tbe plaintiff should at all events remain east of the cut till the train had passed.

The correctness of this instruction depends upon the ■definition of what is called the last clear chance, and we are therefore constrained to discuss that doctrine again. The principle as first formulated in Davies v. Mann, 10 M. & W., (Exc.) 545, and first laid down in this State in Gunter v. Wicker, 85 N. C., 310, was stated in the latter case as follows: “Notwithstanding the previous negligence of the plaintiff, if at the time the injury was done it might have been avoided by the exercise of reasonable care on the part of the defendant, an action will lie for damages.” Ever since that time this Court has applied the principle only, in cases where, after the negligent act of plaintiff was a fact accomplished, the defendant had an opportunity or chance to exercise care which, if improved, would have averted the accident. An illustration of the doctrine would be clearly shown here, if the jury had believed that the engineer, after seeing the plaintiff’s perilous condition on the loose earth, could, by the use of ■ the appliances at his command, have stopped the train. But the leaving of the loose earth, which constituted the defendant’s first negligent act, was also a fact accomplished before the plaintiff started back through the-cut. The defendant had no opportunity to prevent loose earth from following a natural law in giving way when a man threw his weight suddenly upon it. By no conceivable act or omission on his part could the earth have been held stationary after the plaintiff got upon it, and he was negligent in exposing himself to danger, unless the defendant omitted to do some act which, “ notwithstanding the -previous negligence of the flaintiff, ” would have prevented his being injured. But bow the defendant could have caused the earth to remain stationary after the antecedent act of the plaintiff in [1088]*1088exposing himself, it is impossible to conceive. It is an elementary principle that no person can be made to respond in damages for a tort, unless it is shown that the injury was caused by some wrongful act on his part, or might have been prevented in spite of all other operative causes by the discharge of some legal duty which he omitted to perform. The rule as stated by Judge Cooley (in his work on Torts, pp. 70, 71) is quoted both in Clark v. Railroad, 109 N. C., 430, 449, and in Pickett v. Railroad, 117 N. C., 616, and is as follows: “If the original wrong only becomes injurious in consequence of the intervention of the distinct wrongful act or omission by another, the injury will be imputed to the last wrong which was the proximate cause and not to that which was more remote.” In its application to the case at bar, if the jury found that the negligent leaving of the loose earth “ only became injurious” to the plaintiff because he went into the cut contrary to the orders of his superior, then, nothing more appearing, the plaintiff’s carelessness was the operative cause. But, though he was negligent in going through the cut at the time or in the manner of his going, as the jury found the evidence to be, yet, if the engineer discovered, or might by keeping a proper lookout have ascertained, or had reason to believe, that the plaintiff was in peril in time to stop the train before reaching him at his place of refuge, the carelessness of the plaintiff only became injurious by reason of this subsequent omission of the defendant’s servant, notwithstanding the previous want of care on the part of the plaintiff. What did the defendant do, or omit to do, that might have prevented the loose earth from moving ?

. In Ramies v. Mann, the defendant was held liable because, after the plaintiff had tied his ass and left him exposed in the highway, the defendant’s coach driver [1089]*1089could, by proper diligence, have stopped the coach in time to avert a collision and consequent injury. In Pickett's supra; in Deans v. Railroad, 107 N. case Clark v. Railroad, supra; in Little v. Railroad and Russell v. Railroad, decided at this Term, and in every other opinion delivered by this Court, in which the doctrine that the omission to prove the last clear chance to prevent an injury is held to be a proximate cause, the liability of the defendant railroad company is made to depend upon the question whether its servant negligently omitted to stop its train after the plaintiff had placed .himself in a perilous position. The same rule has invariably been applied in the numerous cases where an action has been brought to recover for injury to an animal exposed on the track. Bullock v.

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.E. 740, 118 N.C. 1084, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/styles-v-receivers-of-richmond-danville-railroad-nc-1896.