{
  "id": 11271508,
  "name": "R. T. STANLEY v. SOUTHERN RAILWAY COMPANY",
  "name_abbreviation": "Stanley v. Southern Railway Co.",
  "decision_date": "1912-11-13",
  "docket_number": "",
  "first_page": "323",
  "last_page": "326",
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      "cite": "160 N.C. 323"
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    "name_abbreviation": "N.C.",
    "id": 9292,
    "name": "Supreme Court of North Carolina"
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    "name_long": "North Carolina",
    "name": "N.C."
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    {
      "cite": "88 N. C., 536",
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    {
      "cite": "153 N. C., 296",
      "category": "reporters:state",
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  "last_updated": "2023-07-14T16:32:58.976002+00:00",
  "provenance": {
    "date_added": "2019-08-29",
    "source": "Harvard",
    "batch": "2018"
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  "casebody": {
    "judges": [
      "AlleN, J\\, concurring in result."
    ],
    "parties": [
      "R. T. STANLEY v. SOUTHERN RAILWAY COMPANY."
    ],
    "opinions": [
      {
        "text": "'Clare, C. J.\nThe plaintiff was a white passeng'er on a mixed excursion train from Greensboro to Norfolk and return, in August, 1910. There were twelve or fourteen cars in the train. The colored passengers were in the forward cars and the white passengers in the rear cars. On the return, just before the train arrived at Franklin, Va., the plaintiff, who1 was riding in the second white car behind the rear colored car, being unable to get a seat, went forward to find a friend, Luther Edmundson, and as he got to the front door of the front white passenger car he saw eight or ten negroes, in a drunken condition, just inside the rear colored coach in front of him, trying to take a bottle of whiskey from Luther Proctor, another white man whom he knew. According to his evidence, the negroes had knocked Proctor down and were beating him over the head. They were cursing and in a boisterous condition. The plaintiff was standing in the door of the white car next the colored coach when he saw the negroes beating Proctor over the head and having him down on the floor. Knowing Proctor, he stepped across the platform and caught Proctor by the arm and attempted to help him up. When he did so, the negroes began to curse him, and one of them struck him over the head and staggered him to the platform. Proctor got loose from them, and the plaintiff then undertook to leave the negfoes and get back to the white car, and as he got back to the door of the white car, one of the negroes shot him through the body. He testified that he took hold of Proctor and pulled him out from under the negroes to keep them from killing him. There were no officers in sight at the time nor any on the train. The defendant had no one aboard except an engineer and fireman on the engine, a flagman, who rode in the rear coach, his proper place, a conductor, and a trainmaster. There were fourteen coaches in the train. Pistols were being fired by the people in the colored car, who were rowdy and boisterous. The conductor, when ashed why he did not keep order, said he had no authority to arrest the men.\nUnder Revisal 1905, secs. 2605, 2606, 3757 (b), the railroad had the right to swear in officers at Greensboro to take charge of the excursion train. It certainly was the duty of the defendant to have a sufficient number of officers in possession of the train to preserve order. This was not done, and, indeed, it may be said even as a matter of law, that two men, the conductor and trainmaster, were not force enough to preserve order in a mixed excursion train of fourteen coaches, especially as part of them were white and part colored and there was drinking and rowdyism, which might reasonably have been anticipated.\nThe evidence, which must be taken in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, shows that the negroes were drinking in Norfolk; that they had firearms and whiskey and were drinking and shooting along the trip back. Certainly the jury might well have found, if the evidence had been submitted to them, that the defendant was negligent in not having a more efficient force and in not having taken more effective precautions to prevent such an occurrence as this.\nIt was argued to us that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in going into the colored car. But taking his evidence to be true, he was standing at the front end of the white coach, and seeing a white man being brutally treated by the negroes and in danger of losing his life, he went forward a few feet to rescue him. It cannot be held as a matter of law that this was contributory negligence. The plaintiff was simply obeying the most ordinary dictates of humanity..\nUpon the evidence, the case should have been submitted to the jury, with proper instructions. The judgment of nonsuit is\nReversed.\nAlleN, J\\, concurring in result.",
        "type": "majority",
        "author": "'Clare, C. J."
      },
      {
        "text": "BbowN, J.,\ndissenting: I am of opinion that the motion to nonsuit was properly allowed. As I read the record, there is no just ground upon wbicb to bold tlie defendant liable for negligence in failing to protect tbe plaintiff in a sudden affray in wbicb be voluntarily took part without reason for doing so.\nTbe carrier is not an insurer of tbe lives of its passengers, -and is not required to foresee and guard th'em against all assaults, but only sucb as from tbe circumstances may reasonably be expected to occur. Penny v. R. R., 153 N. C., 296; Britton v. R. R., 88 N. C., 536.\nMr. Hutchison states tbe true rule as follows:\n\u201cTbe negligence for wbicb tbe carrier is held liable is not tbe wrong of tbe fellow-passenger or tbe stranger, but is tbe negligent omission of tbe carrier\u2019s servants to prevent tbe wrong from being committed. In order that sucb omission may constitute negligence, there is involved tbe essential element that tbe carrier or his servants bad knowledge, or with proper care could have bad knowledge, that tbe wrong was imminent, and that be bad sucb knowledge or tbe opportunity to acquire it sufficiently long in advance of tbe infliction of tbe wrong upon tbe passenger to have prevented it with tbe force at bis command.\u201d Hutchison on Carriers, sec. 980, page 1124, and cases cited.\nTbe Supreme Court of Indiana bolds that \u201cIf a passenger is violently assaulted or ejected from tbe train by a fellow-passenger while tbe conductor is absent, or attending to bis duties in another part of tbe train, not knowing of the assault or that it was threatened, tbe carrier cannot be held liable therefor.\u201d R. R. v. Arnold, 26 Ind. App., 190. In that case many authorities are cited.\nI am unable to find any decided case or text-writer wbicb warrants bolding tbe defendant liable under tbe evidence in this case, and none is cited in tbe opinion of tbe Court.",
        "type": "dissent",
        "author": "BbowN, J.,"
      }
    ],
    "attorneys": [
      "John A. Barringer for plaintiff.",
      "Wilson & Ferguson for defendant."
    ],
    "corrections": "",
    "head_matter": "R. T. STANLEY v. SOUTHERN RAILWAY COMPANY.\n(Filed 13 November, 1912.)\n1. Railroads \u2014 Excursion Trains \u2014 Protection for Passengers \u2014 Anticipated Results.\nIt is the duty of a railroad company to bave a sufficient number of officers in charge of its train to preserve order, and it is held in this case that only two men, the conductor and the trainmaster, were not force sufficient for an excursion train of twelve or fourteen coaches, of both white and colored people, carried separately, when drinking and rowdyism thereon might reasonably have been anticipated.\n2. Railroads \u2014 Excursion Trains \u2014 Protection for Passengers \u2014 Police Powers \u2014 Interpretation of Statutes.\nIt is no defense that those in charge of an excursion train of twelve or fourteen coaches leaving from a North Carolina city, and containing white and colored passengers, had no authority to arrest passengers who were rowdy and shooting pistols in the coaches, in an action for damages sustained from a pistol shot by one of the passengers, for under our statutes the railroad' company had the right to swear in officers to take charge of the train. Revisal, secs. 2605, 2606, 3757 (b).\n3. Railroads \u2014 Excursion Trains \u2014 Protection for Passengers \u2014 Negligence \u2014 Questions for Jury \u2014 Contributory Negligence.\nIn an action for damages against a railroad company sustained by the plaintiff from being shot by another passenger on an excursion train of twelve or fourteen coaches containing both white and colored people, there was evidence tending to show that the railroad company had only the conductor and the train-master to preserve order; that several colored pass.engers had been drinking and had an acquaintance of the plaintiff down on the platform of a coach where the coaches for white and colored people came together, beating him, and in endeavoring to \u2022 save his acquaintance, the plaintiff was pulling him from the place of assault into the coach for white people, when he, in turn, was assaulted, and one of the negroes shot him through the body. The conductor had replied that he had no authority to arrest people, when requested to repress the shooting and rowdyism which had been going on in the \u201ccolored\u201d coaches, but neither he nor the trainmaster were near when the plaintiff was shot: Held, sufficient'to go to the jury upon the issue of defendant\u2019s negligence, and that the plaintiff was not barred of his recovery upon the issue of contributory negligence.\nAllen, J., concurring in result; Bkown, J., dissenting.\nAppeal by plaintiff from Whedbee, J., at August Term, 1912, of Guilford.\nThe facts are sufficiently stated in the opinion of the Court by Mr. Chief Justice Ciarle.\nJohn A. Barringer for plaintiff.\nWilson & Ferguson for defendant."
  },
  "file_name": "0323-01",
  "first_page_order": 363,
  "last_page_order": 366
}
