Emry v. Raleigh & Gaston Railroad

Avjery, J.

(dissenting): I do not concur with ray brethren, especially in the sweeping and unqualified rule laid down in the opinion, that it is error in any and every conceivable case, on the part of a nisi prius Judge to define ordinary care as that which wTould have been exercised by an ideal prudent man, acting in the conduct of his own affairs, in the place of the person or corporation charged with negligence, and to leave the jury to determine whether, under all the surrounding circumstances disclosed by the evidence, such person attained to the standard of due care furnished by the definition. It is universally conceded that where the facts are undisputed, *601and but a single inference can be drawn from them, the question of culpable negligence is one addressed exclusively to the Court. On the other hand, it is equally well established that where the testimony is conflicting in material aspects, or where fair minds may deduce more than one conclusion from an admitted state of facts, it is the province of the jury to pass upon an issue or issues involving the alleged negligence, and the duty of the Court upon request of counsel, preferred in apt time, to instruct the jury, whether, upon any given hypothesis arising out of any phase of the evidence, the alleged negligence w'ould be shown to be the proximate cause of the injury.

But I do not concur with the Court in the opinion that where counsel ask for no instruction, even though “ the evidence is voluminous and conflicting,” and presents many varying aspects, it is the duty of the trial Judge to apply the law to every phase of the testimony “as thoroughly as practicable” (or as it can be done).

If the action had been brought to enforce a contract set out in a complaint, and various witnesses had contradicted each other as to many facts and circumstances tending to show on the one hand that the defendant did, and on the other that he did not, assent to such agreement, in the absence of any special requests from counsel it would not have been error to tell the jury that a contract was an agreement upon a sufficient consideration to do or not to do a particular thing ;• that an agreement involved the consent of two minds, and it was the province of the jury, looking at all of the testimony (o determine whether the defendant assented to the agreement declared upon as the basis of the action. If such charge had been excepted to upon the ground that, in some particular aspect of the evidence not mentioned by the Court, there was in law' no assent on the part of The defendant to the agreement, a fatal objection to the sufficiency of his exception would have been found in the principle stated *602for the Court by the present Chief Justice in Morgan v. Lewis, 95 N. C., 296, that “the Court is not required to present possible aspects of the facts in their bearing on an issue, certainly not when they are not requested to do so;” or the still more explicit statement of the rule by the same learned Justice in Brown v. Calloway, 90 N. C , 119, that “if the Court fails to charge the jury specially upon a point, when there are more than one presented by the evidence, this is. not error, unless it ivas requested to give the charge.”

In the hading case of McKinnon v. Morrison, 104 N. C., 363, Justice Clark, for the Court, said: “ When the error is an omission to charge as to some particular aspect of the case, it cánnot be, assigned as error and become the subject of review, unless an instruction was asked for and called to the attention of the Court.” Cited in Taylor v. Plummer, 105 N. C., 58; Helms v. Green, Ibid, 265; McFarland v. Improvement Co., 107 N. C., 369; State v. Fleming, Ibid, 909. The language of Chief Justice Siiith, delivering the opinion of the Court in State v. Bailey, 100 N. C., 334, is, that error could not be assigned and become the subject of review in an omission or neglect to give a specific instruction, even when proper in itself, unless asked and thus called to the attention of the Judge in order that he may rule thereon.” Judge Gaston, in Brown v. Morris, 4 Dev. & Bat., 430, cited in all of the later cases, stated the same principle still more tersely when he said “ a refusal (to charge upon a particular aspect) may constitute error, but mere omission does not.” In Terry v. Railroad, 91 N. C., 243, Justice Ashe, in construing §412 (3) of The Code, said: “But it by no means dispenses with the rule that instructions must be asked upon points, omitted by the Court in the charge, and it is no error to omit these unless asked to charge upon them.” Justice Clark, in Boon v. Murphy, 108 N. C., 187, said: “To permit a party to ask for a new trial * * * for an omission to charge in every possible aspect of the case, would tend not so much *603to make a trial a full and fair determination of the controversy, as a contest of ingenuity between counsel.” The effect of making actions involving a question of negligence exceptions to the rule applicable in all other cases, would be to subject the tact and learning of the Judge to the most trying tension in this particular class of trials, leaving counsel to rest upon their oars till after verdict, and then tax their ingenuity to point out as error any conceivable aspect of the evidence in-which it would have been practicable to present another principle of law applicable to a particular phase of the testimony which the Court omitted to mention. To require our Judges to give in every case, where the evidence is voluminous and conflicting, as thorough and exhaustive a statement of every combination of circumstances growing out of it, together with explicit instructions as to the law of negligence applicable to every such phase, would be to subject them to a burden never before, in my judgment, imposed upon a nisi prius Judge by any statute or rule of practice.

It will be conceded that the question, whether an undisputed state of facts, from which only a single inference can be drawn, is sufficient in law to show that a homicide was excusable on the ground that it was committed in self-defence is one for the Court exclusively ; yet it does not follow that it is error where the testimony is conflicting, or the possible inferences deducible from it are numerous, to leave the jury to determine whether a man of ordinary courage, standing in the position of the prisoner, had reasonable ground to apprehend great bodily harm at the hands of the deceased, and whether he inflicted the injury in order to protect himself from such bodily harm, without giving in detail every conceivable combination of circumstances growing out of the testimony, even where counsel fail to request more specific instructions.

*604If the criterion of the prudent man is as well established as a test of negligence as that of the man of ordinary courage is of self-defence in homicide, as I propose presently to show’ it will be impossible, it seems to me, to offer any satisfactory reason why this Court should depart from principle in holding that a jury are never deemed in law capable of determining what is an exercise of ordinary care, where only a question of liability for damages is involved, while it is their province, where the facts are in doubt, in all cases to decide what would be the conduct of a man of ordinary courage, though a death of infamy upon the gallows may follow from their finding. I thinlc, therefore, that the sweeping rule laid down by the Court not only leads to a radical change in the rules of practice, but to a departure from a principle established by the current of authority in our own as well as other Courts, and clearly founded upon reason.

Ordinary care is defined to be such care as men of ordinary prudence, sense and discretion usually exercise under the same circumstances in the conduct of their own business or affairs. Shaw v. Railroad, 8 Gray, 45; 2 Woods on Railroads, § 301. The degree of care depends upon the hazards and dangers incident to the business in which it is to be exercised, and consequently greater care and skill are required of railroad companies than of carriers transporting goods by coaches, wagons or street-cars di’awn by horses. Wagner v. Railroad, 51 N. Y., 497. The degree of care required in any case must have reference to the subject-mattei’, and must be such only as a man of ordinary prudence and capacity may be expected to exercise under the same circumstances.” Ibid. Mr. Wood, section 302, says: “It may be well to say here that the various expressions found in cases as to the degree of care to be observed by a railway company, in reference to the condition of its road-way, bridges, carriages, engines, etc., after all resolve themselves into the simple rule that it must use reasonable care, and that the degree of care to be exer*605cised must be commensurate with the nature of the business ánd the possible dangerous consequences to the lives and limbs of passengers if it is remiss in the performance of this duty, and the question whether it has exercised such care or not is for the jury.” McIntyre v. R. R., 47 Barb., 523 Judge Campbell, in Railroad v. Huntley, 38 Mich., 537, stated the rule to be, that “if they (railroad companies) exercise their functions in the same way with prudent railway companies generally, and furnish their road and run it in the. customary manner which is generally found and believed to be safe and prudent, they do all that is incumbent upon them.” “ This practically means (says Mr. Wood, 1089) that if the company exercise such care and vigilance as a prudent man under like circumstances would exercise, it has discharged its duty, otherwise it would be meaningless and would call upon the jury to say what railroad companies were prudently managed and what were not.”

In the last edition of Saekett’s Instruction to Juries, 347, the following formula in reference to an issue of negligence is approved : “You are instructed that in determining the question of negligence in this case, you should take into consideration the situation and conduct of both parties at the time of the alleged injury as disclosed by the evidence, and if you believe from the evidence that the injury complained of was caused by the negligence of the defendant’s servants, as charged in the declaration, and without any greater want of care and skill on the part of the plaintiff than was reasonably to be expected from a person of ordinary care, prudence and skill, in the situation in which he found himself placed, then the plaintiff is entitled to recover.”

To sustain this rule the author cites Cooley on Torts, § 674; Wharton on Negligence, § 304; Keokuk Railroad v. True, 88 Ill., 608; Brown v. Railroad, 50 Mo , 461; Cooper v. Railroad, 44 Iowa, 134. A comparison of the language cited, with the instruction given in the Court below and excepted to by *606defendant, will show that it was substantially the same as that set forth by Sackett as a formula.

The principle, as stated by Judge Cooley in his work on Torts, 630, sustains the same view. He says: “All these circumstances are to be taken into account when the question involved is one of negligence, for negligence in a legal sense is no more nor less than this: the failure to observe, for the protection of the interest of another person, that degree of care, precaution and vigilance which the circumstances justly demand, whereby such other person suffers injury.” The same author says, at page 668: “The question (for the jury) will often be, does the defendant appear to have -exercised the degree of care which a reasonable man tuould be expected to exercise under like circumstances? ” aud at page 675 cites Tuff v. Warmon, 5 C. B. (N. S.), 585, in which a similar rule is laid down. The rule, as stated in 1 Shearman & Redfield, § 53, is still more explicit: “In very many cases the law gives no better definition of negligence than the want of such care as men of ordinary prudence or good men of business would use under similar circumstances. Of course this raises a question of fact as to what men of this character usually do under the same circumstances, This is a point upon which a jury have a right to pass, even though no evidence of usage were given, for they may properly determine the question by referring to their own experience and information Indeed they must do so, since express evidence on such points is usually not admissible. Consequently a case of this kind must be left to the jury, even if there is no conflict of evidence, unless indeed there is evidence enough to decide this point, as well as all other questions in the cause.”

Beach, in his work on Contributory Negligence, page 28, says: “ Ordinary care is generally, therefore, a question of fact. * * * The law prescribes as a standard of conduct, to which all men must conform at their peril, the conduct of an ideal average prudent man, whose equivalent fur practiced purposes *607the jury is generally talen to he, and whose culpability or innocence is the supposed test. * * * Specific roles for specific cases are taking the place of the general rule that one must use ordinary care and prudence; but whenever no such rides have been laid down we revert to the original theory, arid decide the case upon the only remaining rational principle,'that ordinary care is to be held to mean that measure of prudence and carefulness that the average prudent man might be expected under the circumstances to exercise.”

“The law considers,” says Justice Oliver WeNDELL Holmes, Jr., “what would be blame-worthy in the average man, the man of ordinary intelligence and prudence, and determines liability by that.” The Com. Law, page .108.

I.may add to these citations from well known text-writers, many leading cases decided by the Courts of England, and most of the Courts of our States, that are referred to by the authors to sustain their views; but will add only a few references. Railroad v. Beatty, 73 Texas, 592; Hoffman v. Water Co., 10 Cal., 413; Wolf v. Water Co , Id., 541; 16 Am. & Eng. Ency., p. 402; Reynold v. Burlington, 52 Vt., 300; Railroad v. Gower, 85 Tenn., 465; 4 Am. & Eng. Ency., p. 22.

I do not admit that this consensus of authority, can be successfully met and overcome by the assumption that this Court has fallen into a particular groove from which it cannot be extricated except by such legislative action as will place us in line with most of the Courts of the States, as well as the Courts of England. On the contrary, I maintain that, though there is some conflict among the older decisions as to the rule governing actions brought to recover for negligence, all of the leading cases, decided for twenty years, where the question was even indirectly raised, have been in accord with the principle that where the evidence is conflicting and voluminous, and no instructions are asked, the Court may fall back upon the original rule, as stated by Beach, and let the jury put themselves in the place of the average pru*608dent man, as they would on a trial for murder be instructed to look at the testimony from the standpoint of an ideal man of ordinary courage situated as the prisoner was when the killing was done.

It is time that there are dicta in three or four cases in which the abstract proposition is stated that the rule of the prudent man is not to be submitted as a guide to the jury, but these obiter statements are in conflict with principles which underlie numberless decisions of this Court, unless explained by the fact that, in those particular cases, instructions were asked or the facts were undisputed. In Farmer v. Railroad, 88 N. C., at page 567, it appears that the plaintiff requested the following instructions: If the plaintiff was guilty of negligence in turning his mule out, yet if the defendant by the exercise of proper care could have avoided the injury, the plaintiff is entitled to recover.” The appeal was in part from the refusal to give this instruction, which was held to be error. Justice Ashe, delivering the opinion of the Court, said : “ But conceding that negligence was imputable to the plaintiff in turning his mule out of his lot, as described by the witnesses, still it was the duty of defendant to exercise proper care to avoid the injury, for it has been held by this Court that, “notwithstanding the previous negligence of the plaintiff, if, at the time when the injury was committed, it might have been avoided by the exercise of reasonable care and prudence on the part of defendant, an action will lie for damages. Gunter v. Wicker, 85 N. C., 310. * * * * The instruction asked by the plaintiff and refused by the Court was almost in the identical language of this decision, and when the Court declined to give it, the jury may possibly have been misled by the inference reasonably to be drawn from the -refusal.” In that case it was declared to be error to refuse to allow the jury to pass upon the question whether, by the exercise of ordinary care (or that which a prudent man would have exercised under similar circumstances), the defendant could *609have avoided the injury. This was 'not said obiter, but bore directly on the point raised. In our case it is held to have been error to allow the jury to pass upon the-question whether a man of ordinary prudence would, under the circumstances; have put his brick upon the land where the feme plaintiff’s brick were destroyed, because “the jury were left to decide that there was or not negligence, according as they might think a. man of ordinary prudence might do, one way or the opposite thereof, in view of the facts.” If the question whether the defendant, in the one case, could, by exercising the care which a prudent man occupying its place would have exhibited, might have avoided an injury, was one of fact for the jury, it is difficult to distinguish the question of plaintiff’s negligence from that of a defendant, and determine upon what principle it falls peculiarly within the province of the, Court to refuse anjr such test as applicable to contributory negligence only. If such is the standard or criterion by which a jury may determine whether a defendant railway company has exercised ordinary care, why may not the same test be applied by the jury to the question whether an injury is due to the concurrent negligence of a plaintiff? Yet, as we will see, the case of Farmer v. Railroad, supra, does not stand alone in support of the right of the jury upon the point mentioned by Justice Ashe, if the negligence of both parties must be passed upon under the same general rule.

In Owens v. Railroad, 88 N. C., 507, Chief Justice Smith; delivering the opinion of the Court, said : “ The rule of liability has its modifications, even where there is mutual negligence, for if the plaintiff was negligent, and the defendant by the use of ordinary care could have avoided doing the injury, he will nevertheless be subject to the action; and so, if the defendant was negligent, and the plaintiff by the use of ordinary care could have escaped- the injury, the latter is-not entitled to recover. * * *. The question was simplv *610as to the character or quality of the intestate’s own act, as determined by the attending circumstances, and, as there is no presumption when all the facts are disclosed that proper care was used, so there is none that it was wanting, and the transaction should have been committed to the jury to find how the fact was. * * * The jury should be left free to determine the essential fact on which the defendant’s liability depends.” The essential question was previously declared to be, whether the intestate “ was watchful and used due care ” (such as a prudent man would have exercised), “ and the collision could not have been prevented by the use of such appliances as were at command.”

Where the question of liability on the part of a railway company for negligently killing cattle has arisen, this Court has uniformly held that it was the province of the jury, in cases where the evidence was conflicting, or fair minds might deduce more than one inference from it, to determine whether the locomotive engineer could, by keeping a proper outlook, or by proper watchfulness, or by' the exercise of ordinary care, have discovered that the cattle were on the track in time to avert the danger by using the appliances at his command — ordinary care being, according to all the authorities, synonymous with that which an ideal prudent man would have exhibited under similar circumstances.

In Turrentine v. Railroad 92 N. C., 641, Chief Justice Smith, for the Court, said: “ The question for the jury, in the words •of an eminent English Judge, is ‘ whether the damage was occasioned entirely by the negligence or improper conduct of the defendant, or whether the plaintiff himself so far contributed to the misfortune, by his own negligence or want of ordinary and common care and caution, that'but for such negligence and want of ordinary care and caution on his part, the misfortune would not have happened. In the first case .the plaintiff would be entitled to recover, in the latter not, as but for his own fault, the misfortune would not have hap*611pened,’ ” etc. A new trial was awarded in that case, because the jury had not found whether the plaintiff had exercised ordinary care, as it was their province to do, yet if ordinary care is that usually exercised by the prudent man similarly situated, how can a Court possibly avoid leaving a jui;y to test the question of care by the standard laid down by every text-writer ?

Suppose that a trial Judge tells a jury, as he unquestionably must often instruct them, that the liability of a railway company depends upon the question to be decided by them on the evidence, whether the engineer could, by the exercise of ordinary care, notwithstanding any negligence on the part of the plaintiff, have avoided killing cattle or inflicting an injury on a person, and the jury should return for special instruction as to what is meant by ordinary care. The Judge must respond that it is such care as the average prudent man would exhibit under like circumstances, because the law furnishes no other reply for him. Thus it is that practically the rule of the prudent man is always passed upon in both classes of cases mentioned. The jury are left to determine, in actions for waste and against bailors, whether a prudent owner in fee would have cleared land under similar circumstances. Shine v. Wilcox, 1 Dev. & Bat. Eq., 631; Sherrill v. Connor, 107 N. C., 630; Morris v. Cass, 10 Kansas, 288. Does reason or public policy forbid the adoption of a similar rule in trying issues of negligence?

The principle established in Gunter v. Wicker, supra, that the liability of a party often depends upon the question to be decided by the jury, whether a defendant, by the exercise of ordinary care (or that which characterizes the ideal prudent man), is also approved in Deans v. Railroad, 107 N. C., 686; McAdoo v. Railroad, 105 N. C., 140; Lay v. Railroad, 106 N. C., 410, and numerous other cases. I do not concur with the Court in the view that in all the cases where this question has been decided- by the jury, they have .usurped the *612functions of the Court and passed upon an' issue of law by determining what constitued negligence. When the facts are undisputed, and but a single inference can be drawn from them, it is the duty of the Court to instruct the jury whether, if the evidence is believed, the defendant was justifiable or excusable in beating or killing his adversary; but it has never been insisted on that account that where the testimony was conflicting, the application by the jury of the test question, whether a man of ordinary firmness or courage would have deemed it necessary to strike the blow if similarly situated, necessarily involved the assumption by the jury of the right to say what did or did not constitute self-defence as a question of law. It seems to me that reason, authority and public policy combine to deter us from adopting a peculiar principle, and an anomalous rule of practice in actions involving the law of negligence, when there is no sufficient reason for distinguishing such cases, and when, with the increasing number and growing business of railway companies, these peculiar and complex rules must beso often applied. I assume that the Court does not intend to overrule the whole line of cases in which it is held not to be error to omit to give instructions not asked, and that, therefore, the rule laid down in this case, that it is the duty of the Court to apply the law as far as practicable to every aspect of the evidence, whether in response to or in the absence of-requests, and that it is error to omit to state any practicable view of the law applicable to the testimony, is not a general one, but applies only where an issue of negligence is involved.

Of the cases cited from our own reports, and relied upon to sustain the doctrine laid down by the Court, it appears upon examination of them, that either upon an undisputed state of facts or upon the most favorable view of the evidence, or “supposing all the evidence to be true, the Court held that there was or was not negligence in the following, to wit, Herring v. Railroad, 10 Ired., 402; Avera v. Sexton, 13 *613Ired., 247; Heathcock v. Pennington,, 11 Ired., 642; Smith v. Railroad, 99 N. C., 241; Smith v. Railroad, 64 N. C., 236; Anderson v. Steamboat Co., Ibid, 399; Sellars v. Railroad, 94 N. C., 654. The material facts seem to have been admitted in Biles v. Holmes, 11 Ired., 16. On the other hand, the exception passed upon was to the refusal to give either instruction on a particular phase of the evidence, or the general instruction that negligence either was or was not proved in anjr view of the testimony in Aycock v. Railroad, 89 N. C., 324; Wallace v. Railroad, 98 N. C., 494, as well as in Avera v. Sexton, and others of the cases already distinguished.

In Pleasants v. Railroad, 95 N. C.. 195, this Court expressly, declared that no exception had been taken below that could be entertained on appeal, and of course all that was said in the unnecessary discussion of points raised for the first time in the appellate Court was obiter, and is not binding as authority. Perry v. Scott (decided at this term,). The abstract statements in Heathcock v. Pennington and in Biles v. Holmes, supra, are not to be treated as authoritative, because both cases were decided upon the undisputed testimony, but are to be considered as qualified by the peculiar character of the evidence. It will not be contended that in a case where prayers for instruction were preferred, or where the facts were undisputed, or the material facts were not controverted, the question was fairly raised whether, in the absence of any specific requests for instruction and upon voluminous and. complicated evidence, giving rise in its varying aspects to different legal conclusions, the trial Judge was bound to work out every reasonable hypothesis arising out of perhaps almost endless combinations of parts of the testimony, and present the law applicable to every such phase. If it is not practicable to pass upon every possible combination of conflicting testimony, by what rule are we to define the limit to which it is practicable to work out these intricate problems ? What rule shall we offer to the *614diligent nisi prius Judges as an infallible guide in conducting such trials? They know that omissions to giv,e charges upon the trial of all actions not involving a question of negligence are not subject to exception, but the boundary line of error must necessarily cover every conceivable omission where such a question is raised, under the law, as established in the case at bar, and the rule will therefore impose upon them unusual and, I think, unnecessary burdens.

I regret all the more that the necessity arose for differing with the Court, because the case might have been disposed' of upon the other ground, in which a majority have concurred, that, in the most favorable view of the evidence the loss was directly due to the plaintiff’s negligence in placing his brick in an exposed place. While, however, it was not essentia], it was the right of the Court to pass upon every point fairly raised, and I do not question its exercise. It is true, that had the decision rested upon that ground alone, I would not havelconcurred with my brethren, for two reasons: First, it was my understanding that the brick-yard had been removed from its former location, and that the fact was conceded. I prefer, however, not to extend this fruitless discussion by stating my second ground of objection to the position referred to.

I must not, and I think will not, be understood as maintaining that the doctrine established in England, and in many of the most respectable Courts of America, that the jury can determine as a rule whether there was negligence, prevails here, in view of our own adjudications; but I do contend that where the facts are voluminous and the testimony conflicting, or the inferences numerous, the trial Judge should not be held'to have erred-for failing to give supposi-tious instructions ad infinitum, though correct as legal propositions, any more where a railroad company has killed a man than where one citizen has slain another. I insist that the opinion of the Court establishes not only a peculiar but *615an indefinite rule in a particular class of cases, and makes it almost impossible to avoid error in a long complicated case involving many conflicts in the evidence upon various points, and tends therefore to delay and defeat the ends of justice.

In a somewhat extended investigation, I have failed to find that such a burden has been imposed upon nisi prius Judges under the rules of practice prescribed in any other State.

Per curiam. New trial.