Williams v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad

84 S.E. 408, 168 N.C. 360, 1915 N.C. LEXIS 54
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 10, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 84 S.E. 408 (Williams v. Atlantic Coast Line 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
Williams v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad, 84 S.E. 408, 168 N.C. 360, 1915 N.C. LEXIS 54 (N.C. 1915).

Opinion

AxleN, J.

The plaintiff was a brakeman, working in the yards of the defendant company at Eocky Mount, and while ascending a box car by the side ladder, in the performance of his duties, was struck by the eaves of a small shanty about 7 feet high, in such close proximity to the track that it was impossible to clear the shanty in the act of climbing the side of the car. The shanty was located about 15 feet south of a ear shed. The plaintiff mounted the car about five ear lengths from the shanty, but could not go to the top, as there was no end ladder on the car, until after he passed the car shed, because of the overhanging eaves. The train was running at a speed of 10 to 12 miles per hour. The shanty could not be seen from where he mounted the car, because a line of posts supporting the car shed obstructed his view. . Immediately upon passing the ear shed, he began to ascend the car, as his duties required him to do, looking up, and was struck by the shanty and seriously injured. Plaintiff knew that there was a shanty in the railroad yards, but did not know of its location with reference to the track and had not been warned of its dangerous proximity to the track, and had not been working on the job but three days when the injury occurred.

The plaintiff admitted that one standing on the ladder would have nothing to prevent him from seeing- the shanty after he left the shed, and that a person in the act of climbing could not pass the-shanty without being- knocked off, unless he was paying particular attention, and then only by squeezing himself close to the ladder.

The contention of the defendant is that these facts present no case for the consideration of a jury; that they furnish no evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant, and, on the contrary, prove the contributory negligence of the plaintiff.

The correctness of the first position depends on the duty resting upon the defendant, and whether the facts show a breach of this duty, which proximately caused the injury complained of.

*362 In Buchanan v. Lumber Co., ante, 40, Justice Hoke, speaking for tbe Court, said: “It is fully established with us that an employer, in the exercise of reasonable care, must provide for his employees a safe place to do his work, and a failure of duty in this respect will constitute negligence. Co ok v. Cranberry Co., 161 N. C., 39; Jackson v. Lumber Co., 158 N. C., 805; Tanner v. Lumber Co., 140 N. C., 475. An examination of the authorities will show that the position is very insistent in the case of railroads where a breach of duty in this respect is not unlikely to result in serious and often fatal injuries.” And this principle was applied to evidence tending to show that, for a week or more, the plaintiff’s road had been left with a limb or snag deep in the ground at one end and leaning over towards the railroad track in such manner that it day by day scraped along the sides of the engine and cars and where it was liable, at any time, to cause an injury of some sort to the train or its employees.

In Texas and Pacific Ry. Co. v. Swearingen, 196 U. S., 61, the negligence alleged on the part of the company was the existence, in close proximity to a switch track, of a scale box, by striking against which the plaintiff was injured while doing duty as a switchman, and the Court, dealing with the question of negligence, said: “Prima facie, the location of scales where the tracks were only the standard distance apart, and where a space of less than 2 feet was left for the movements of a switchman between the side of a freight car and the scale box, encumbered, as he would be in the nighttime, with a lantern employed for the purpose of signaling, did not incontestably establish the performance by the defendant company of the duty imposed upon it to use due care to provide a reasonably safe place for the use of a switchman in its employ. And so far from the proof making it certain that the necessity of the situation required the erection of the structure between tracks Nos. 1 and 2 as existing, there was proof that the railway company owned unoccupied ground, intended for other tracks, to the south of track No. 4, justifying the inference that the distance between tracks Nos. 1 and 2 might have been increased, and the employment of the scales thus rendered less hazardous to switchmen, or that the scales might have been removed to a safer location.

“It was, therefore, properly a question for the determination of the jury whether or not the scales were maintained in a reasonably safe place, and if not, whether the plaintiff had notice thereof.”

This statement of the law is peculiarly pertinent to the case before us in view of the evidence for the plaintiff that the shanty which caused the injury was used for employees working around the transfer shed to warm in, and that there would have been no danger if it had been turned round.

*363 In Georgia Pac. Ry. v. Davis, 92 Ala., 308, the plaintiff, a brakeman, was injured while on a side ladder by a rock projecting from the side of a cut, and it was. said by the Court: “In view of the exigencies of the service, involving the use of ladders on the sides of cars by employees, and this while the train is in motion, and in view of the custom of resorting to such use, which the evidence here goes to show, we do not hesitate to affirm that it was the part of ordinary care on the part of the defendant — assuming, as the jury might have found, the truth of this testimony — to construct and maintain its roadway so as not only to admit of the safe passage of its cars, but also free from any projection or obstruction which would endanger the persons of employees in the use of these side ladders while the train is proceeding on its way, and that the defendant’s failure in this regard rendered it liable to the plaintiff for any damages resulting to him from such failure, unless his own negligence proximately contributed thereto.”

This principle was applied in Dorsey v. Construction Co., 42 Wis., 584, in behalf of a conductor of a freight train, who was injured while ascending a side ladder by coming in contact with a cattle chute placed near the track; in Flanders v. R. R., 51 Minn., 193, in behalf of a brakeman who was descending a -ladder and was injured by striking a section house; and in Allen v. R. R., 57 Iowa, in behalf of a brakeman injured by striking a cattle chute while getting off a moving train.

Heilig v. R. R., 152 N. C., 471, is also in point. In that case the plaintiff, an employee, was injured while riding on the steps of the engine, according to custom, by coming in contact with the posts of a coal chute. A judgment of nonsuit entered in the Superior Court was set aside, this Court saying: “It (the railroad) cannot permit obstacles to exist so close to the tracks traversed by such engines as to endanger the life and limb of its employees using its engines in accordance with a custom so long established.”

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Bluebook (online)
84 S.E. 408, 168 N.C. 360, 1915 N.C. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-atlantic-coast-line-railroad-nc-1915.