Wilson v. . Massagee

32 S.E.2d 335, 224 N.C. 705, 156 A.L.R. 922, 1944 N.C. LEXIS 251
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 13, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 32 S.E.2d 335 (Wilson v. . Massagee) 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
Wilson v. . Massagee, 32 S.E.2d 335, 224 N.C. 705, 156 A.L.R. 922, 1944 N.C. LEXIS 251 (N.C. 1944).

Opinion

Civil action for recovery of damages for alleged wrongful death, G.S., 28-173, formerly C. S., 160, to which action Shell Oil Company, a corporation, and Southern Railway Company, a corporation, were made parties defendant, without notice, upon motion of original defendants Shirley L. Massagee and Sinclair Refining Company, under G.S., 1-240, formerly C. S., 618, as amended by Public Laws 1929, chapter 68, and on their alleged cross action (1) for exoneration for that the injury of which plaintiff complains was directly and proximately caused by the joint and concurrent negligence of Shell Oil Company and Southern Railway Company, and (2) for contribution for that if original defendants be held actionably negligent, the joint and concurrent negligence of Shell Oil Company and Southern Railway Company was also a proximate cause of the injury resulting in death of intestate of plaintiff, thereby entitling original defendants to invoke against Shell Oil Company and Southern Railway Company the provisions of C. S., 618, amended as above stated, now G.S., 1-240, heard upon motion of Southern Railway Company, on special appearance, to strike out the order making it a party defendant as above stated, and to dismiss the action as to it. *Page 707

The complaint of plaintiff alleges, in part, and summarily stated, that the injury to and death of plaintiff's intestate proximately resulted from the joint and concurrent negligence of the original defendants, as specified, when on 29 January, 1944, at a place known as Friendship, North Carolina, about seven miles from Greensboro, on the Southern Railway track from Greensboro to Winston-Salem, North Carolina, a truck of defendant Sinclair Refining Company, driven by defendant Shirley L. Massagee and filled with gasoline, collided with a certain passenger train of the Southern Railway Company operated by said intestate as engineer.

Then the original defendants, in pertinent parts of their cross action, allege that: "2. The Southern Railway Company is a corporation organized, existing and doing business under the laws of the State of Virginia and is engaged in the operation of an interstate railway system over a considerable portion of the United States. Said company maintains a line of railway tracks from Greensboro, North Carolina, to Winston-Salem, North Carolina, over which it operates trains as a part of its interstate system of railways." And "6. The plaintiff's intestate was injured and burned in the collision referred to in plaintiff's complaint, and the death of plaintiff's intestate was caused directly and proximately by the joint and concurring negligence of the Shell Oil Company and Southern Railway Company, and not by any negligence of these defendants" in manner specified.

The grounds for the motion of the Southern Railway Company here pertinent are: "3. That, at the time and on the occasion referred to in the pleadings, the Southern Railway Company was engaged in interstate commerce and the plaintiff's intestate, as an employee of said Southern Railway Company, was employed in interstate commerce, and while so employed was operating the train referred to in the pleadings.

"4. That the rights and obligations of the plaintiff's intestate and the Southern Railway Company arose out of and are exclusively controlled and defined by the Federal Employers' Liability Act, the said Act being exclusive of all other rights and remedies between said parties in the premises.

"5. That under said Federal Act, the plaintiff's intestate is the only person having any right or remedy against the Southern Railway Company by reason of the injury or death of the plaintiff's intestate; and that, consequently, neither the Sinclair Oil Company, nor any party other than the plaintiff's intestate has any right to institute suit against the said Southern Railway Company by reason of the injury or death of the plaintiff's intestate.

"6. That any right which the plaintiff has against the Southern Railway Company, by reason of the death of her intestate, arose out of, and *Page 708 is exclusively controlled by, the Federal Employers' Liability Act; that any right which the plaintiff's intestate has against the Sinclair Oil Company by reason of the things and matters alleged in the complaint arose out of G.S., 28-173, and that the Southern Railway Company and the Sinclair Oil Company could not be joint tort-feasors in reference to the plaintiff's intestate within the meaning of G.S., 1-240."

When the motion of the Southern Railway Company came on for hearing and being heard at time and place named, by consent of all parties, upon pleadings and affidavits appearing in the record, and after argument of counsel, the court finds the following facts: "1. That this action was instituted by the plaintiff, Mrs. Vera L. Wilson, as Administratrix of the Estate of Arthur E. Wilson, deceased, against Shirley L. Massagee and Sinclair Refining Company to recover damages for the alleged wrongful death of plaintiff's intestate, as appears from the complaint herein.

"2. That the original defendants above named, in their answer, set up a cross action against the Shell Oil Company and the Southern Railway Company, as appears in the record herein, and obtained an order of the Clerk dated August 24, 1944, making the said Southern Railway Company and Shell Oil Company parties defendant, and, pursuant to said order, summons was duly issued and served upon said additional defendants, and that the court has jurisdiction of said defendants.

"3. That within thirty days from the date of service of summons upon it, the said Southern Railway Company filed its special appearance and motion as appears in the record.

"4. That the above mentioned order of the Clerk making said additional defendants was entered without notice to said additional defendants.

"5. That at the time of the collision referred to in the complaint herein, and in the cross action of Shirley L. Massagee and Sinclair Refining Company against the Southern Railway Company, this being the time of the injury to the plaintiff's intestate which caused his death, the said plaintiff's intestate was in the employ of the Southern Railway Company as the engineer on the train referred to in the pleadings herein; and that at said time the said Southern Railway Company was engaged, and the plaintiff's intestate was employed, in interstate commerce."

Upon these facts and upon the pleadings, the court being of opinion that Southern Railway Company and original defendants are not joint tort-feasors within the meaning of G.S., 1-240, and consequently that the original defendants had no right to bring in said Southern Railway Company as party defendant herein, entered judgment allowing the *Page 709 motion of the Southern Railway Company and striking out the order of the clerk making said company a party defendant herein, and dismissing the cross action against it.

The original defendants, Shirley L. Massagee and Sinclair Refining Company, appeal to the Supreme Court and assign error. The question involved on this appeal, as stated in brief of appellants, is this: "Where plaintiff sues a defendant under G.S., 28-173, alleging that her intestate was killed by the negligence of that defendant, may that defendant join as a joint tort-feasor under G.S., 1-240, a railway company by which the plaintiff's intestate was employed in interstate commerce?"

The court below answered in the negative, and we are of opinion that the answer finds support in law.

The question as stated presupposes, and rightly so from the pleadings,

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Bluebook (online)
32 S.E.2d 335, 224 N.C. 705, 156 A.L.R. 922, 1944 N.C. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-massagee-nc-1944.