Acree v. Eureka Pipe Line Co.

8 S.E.2d 186, 122 W. Va. 242, 1940 W. Va. LEXIS 42
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 26, 1940
Docket8985
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 8 S.E.2d 186 (Acree v. Eureka Pipe Line Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Acree v. Eureka Pipe Line Co., 8 S.E.2d 186, 122 W. Va. 242, 1940 W. Va. LEXIS 42 (W. Va. 1940).

Opinion

Riley,

President:

The plaintiff, Chessie Aeree, brought this action in trespass on the case against the defendant, The Eureka Pipe Line Company, to recover damages for injuries alleged to have been received by her about 7:30 p. m., on September 25,1937, by falling into a hole, commonly called a bell hole, which had been dug by the defendant for the purpose of repairing a leak in its oil line. Error is prosecuted to the judgment of the circuit court of Calhoun County entered upon a verdict in defendant’s favor rendered at the close of all the evidence at the direction of the court.

The record discloses that plaintiff actually was injured on the evening of the day in question somewhere between her home in Roane County and the pump station at Richardson, in Calhoun County. She and her husband were, at the time, on their way to the post office at Richardson. In going to Richardson, the Aerees, and others living in the same vicinity, usually followed a well-beaten path down Axpalent Run to the West Fork of the Little Kan-awha River — dividing line between Roane and Calhoun Counties; thence over West Fork at a point where the Hope Natural Gas Company’s pipe lines crossed the same, using either the pipe lines or the rocks and cement blocks which had been placed in the stream just above, and for *244 the protection of, the pipe lines; thence over a strip of bottom land to the county road, which paralleled the river. The defendant’s oil line, over which the bell hole had been dug, lay between the river and the road, being parallel thereto.

• There is also testimony to the effect that when a horse was used, the crossing was made at a point some 46 feet down below the Hope’s pipe lines, and when the water was too high for either horse or foot travel, the crossing was made by boat approximately 200 feet upstream from the pipe line. Whether the crossing was made by boat or on foot, the paths leading from the river converged at or near a point where the bell hole had been dug and across the defendant’s oil line onto the county road. In fact, a disinterested witness, a mail carrier, whose testimony does not seem to have been materially contradicted, testified that when he crossed the river by boat in the course of his routine duties and continued on toward Richardson, he invariably passed the place where the bell hole was dug.

The defendant in 1906 obtained a right of way for and laid a pipe line thereon, which, at the point where it was crossed by the path, was buried to a depth of about five feet.

Plaintiff claims a right of way over and across the defendant’s pipe line both by prescription from user extending over a period of many years as well as by private grant. Undoubtedly, she, as well as many other persons, used this pathway for long periods of time. In fact, she testified that she was thirty-one years of age and had travelled this pathway for twenty years. There was introduced into the record an agreement dated August 14, 1924, between plaintiff’s mother and stepfather, one Haney, and parties named Langford, which provided for a right of way down Axpalent Run to the Hope lines, but plaintiff claims one C. R. Meadows, the owner of the strip lying between the river and the county road, gave plaintiff’s stepfather- by written agreement, also dated August 14, 1924, a private grant over the land from the river to the *245 county road. A canceled check of the same date as the agreement, signed by Haney and payable to and endorsed by Meadows, was introduced. Plaintiff claimed this check represented the consideration for the grant of the claimed right of way on the Calhoun side of the river. She introduced evidence to the effect that after the agreement was made with Meadows, the latter had obtained possession of the paper claimed to show the Calhoun County grant and destroyed it. On the other hand, Meadows testified that the paper was destroyed by plaintiff’s mother. Be that as it may, we think the plaintiff was not a mere trespasser, as claimed by defendant. She and her husband, as well as others, had been permitted to pursue the pathway from the river to the county road over a period of many years. The evidence as to a right of way is sufficiently strong that it presents a question for.the jury. True, defendant’s grant from Meadows’ predecessor in title dated from 1906, but at most it was a grant for a pipe line under the surface and when made and the pipe line constructed, the pathway, according to the evidence, had already been well defined, and defendant company knew, or should have known, of its user by the many persons who travelled either on foot or by boat from the Roane County side of the river to where the Hope lines crossed to the county road.

The hole in question had been dug in July, 1937. It was about five feet beneath the surface of the ground and at the top was substantially five feet square. Notwithstanding it was opened in the line of the pathway over which plaintiff was proceeding, it was allowed to remain open and substantially unprotected, except for earth piled around it, until after plaintiff had been injured. Under these circumstances, we are prone to view the evidence bearing on defendant’s negligence in plaintiff’s favor. This credence alone would present a jury question.

Assuming, however, that plaintiff was rightfully on the premises and that defendant company was guilty of actionable negligence in digging and maintenance of the bell hole, can we say that the trial court erred in directing *246 a verdict in defendant’s favor? The answer to this question requires a determination.whether or not, under all the facts and circumstances of this case, the Aerees’ version as to how the injuries were incurred will bear the test of the rule that “Courts are not required to believe that which is contrary to human experience and the laws of nature, or which they judicially know to be incredible * * Owen v. Appalachian Power Co., 78 W. Va. 596, 610, 89 S. E. 262, 268. The rule generally prevails in this state that a court will not allow a jury to find a verdict in favor of a party, or if one is found will not allow it to stand, where the evidence offered to support it lacks plausibility and is incredible. Marshall v. Conrad, Admr., 118 W. Va. 321, 327, 191 S. E. 553.

Let us now consider the record again to see if it is sufficient to sustain a finding by a jury of what plaintiff contends actually occurred in the vicinity of the bell hole, when she was injured. In this regard, the condition of the soil around and in the hole, the depth and size of the hole, and the condition of plaintiff’s body and clothes immediately after she received the injuries become most important and bear heavily upon the issue of the credibility of plaintiff’s story.

Mr. and Mrs. Aeree both testified that on the evening in question they crossed the river at the Hope lines; that plaintiff preceded her husband at a distance of about fifteen feet up the river bank and toward the county road;, and that though on various occasions she had attended church and visited the grocery store and post office at Richardson, she had no knowledge of the bell hole and had not passed along the pathway since June. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
8 S.E.2d 186, 122 W. Va. 242, 1940 W. Va. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/acree-v-eureka-pipe-line-co-wva-1940.