Adams v. South Carolina & Georgia Extension R. R.

47 S.E. 693, 68 S.C. 403, 1904 S.C. LEXIS 53
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 11, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 47 S.E. 693 (Adams v. South Carolina & Georgia Extension R. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. South Carolina & Georgia Extension R. R., 47 S.E. 693, 68 S.C. 403, 1904 S.C. LEXIS 53 (S.C. 1904).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

*405 Mr. Chief Justice Pope.

Ernest L. Adams, while employed as and in service as a brakeman on a freight train, owned and operated by the defendant railroad company, was killed at or near Catawba Junction, S. C., on the 24th day of-November, 1900. The plaintiff was duly appointed the administratrix of his estate, and as such brought her action against the railroad company, under what is known as Lo-rd Campbell’s Act, to recover damages alleged to be $20,000 in favor of said Lilian S. Adams, as the widow of said intestate. In her complaint, omitting the caption and the formal parts relating to the corporate character and location of the defendant railroad company, and that part alleging the grant of administration to the plaintiff, also the date of the death of intestate, she alleges as follows:

“5. That while in the employment of said defendant company on said date in said capacity, while at Catawba Junction, in York County, he was called upon by the officers and employees of said road in authority over him to assist in the handling, management and shifting of the freight train on which he was employed as aforesaid, and which was being so handled, managed and shifted under the direction and by the orders of the conductor of said train.
“6. That while engaged as set forth in the preceding paragraph and while engaged in making (under orders to him from the conductor) what is known as a ‘flying switch,’ the said Ernest L. Adams, without fault on his part, but through the negligence and carelessness of the said railroad company, its agents, employees and officers, was projected and thrown upon the tracks of said railroad company in front of the engine operating and pulling said train, and then and there crushed to death by the wheels of said engine, the same being operated by the agents and employees of said defendant company.
“7. That the work and labor of making said ‘flying switch,’ in which the said deceased was engaged under orders to him from the conductor of said train at the time of his negligent killing by said railroad company, was an extra *406 hazardous, careless and negligent handling of said train by the officers and employees in authority over said deceased, and was not necessary nor incident to the proper and reasonably safe management and operation of said train nor the switching of the cars thereof, and which, on account of its dangerous nature, risk and exposure to which it subjects employees of railroads, is prohibited by a large majority of the railroads operating in this country. Plaintiff in this connection further shows and alleges that the said deceased was totally unfitted to perform the work required of him in assisting in making said ‘flying switch,’ and his unfitness for this work was well known to said railroad company, its officers and agents, before and at the time he was ordered to do said work.
“8. That the work of assisting in making said ‘flying switch’ was not within the scope of the duties for which said Ernest E. Adams was employed as flagman, but owing to the negligence of the said railroad company, in failing to provide for said train the number of brakemen necessary to properly operate it, and the number required by the laws of this State to be supplied to a train of the size and having the number of cars that were in said train, whose duty it would have been to have made such ‘flying switch’ instead of deceased, the said Ernest E. Adams, was ordered by the conductor O'f said train to do said work; and while doing the same, without fault on his part, but through the negligence of the said railroad company, its agent and officers, in the particulars above set out, the defendant met his death as aforesaid.
‘‘9. That by the negligent killing of said Ernest E. Adams, this plaintiff being- the beneficiary for whose benefit and in whose behalf this action is brought, by the negligent killing as aforesaid, by the loss of companionship and support of said deceased, and the great mental anguish to which she has been subjected by reason of said killing, and the loss of said deceased, has been damaged in the sum of twenty thousand dollars, payment of which has been *407 demanded of defendant and the same refused, and now remains unpaid.”

The answer of defendant admits its corporate character and location; that Ernest R. Adams came to his death at the time and place set out in the complaint; that plaintiff is the administratrix of his estate; but it avers that Ernest R. Adams came to his death from his own gross carelessness and recklessness, or through misadventure; and then denies all other allegations in the complaint.

The action came on for trial before Judge Dantzler and a jury at a special term of the Court of Common Pleas of York County, held on the 3d day of February, 1903. At the close of plaintiff’s testimony the defendant moved for a nonsuit. During the argument for that motion the plaintiff moved the Court to- be allowed to amend his complaint by striking out the word “flying,” wherever it occurred in the expression “flying switch,” so as to make the allegations of the complaint correspond with the proof.

The motion to amend was refused and an order for non-suit was granted. The order for nonsuit was as follows:

“The above entitled action came on to be tried before me and a jury. At the close of plaintiff’s testimony, defendant moved for a nonsuit on two grounds:
“1. That there was no testimony that the deceased, Ernest R. Adams, was engaged at the time that he met his death in making a ‘flying switch,’ as alleged in the complaint.
“2. That, apart from the ground first stated, there was no evidence of any kind of negligence on the part of the defendant, as a cause of the death of the plaintiff’s intestate.
“The motion for nonsuit by Messrs. Geo-. W. S. Hart and N. W. Hardin, attorneys for the defendant, is granted, with leave to the defendant tó enter judgment for -costs against the plaintiff.”

From this order the plaintiff has appealed upon the following grounds:

“I. In that his Honor erred in refusing to- allow the plaintiff to conform the pleadings- to the proof by striking out the *408 word ‘flying,’ wherever it occurred in the amended complaint in the expression ‘flying switch,’ the error being that said motion should have been allowed because the variation between the pleadings and the proof was not material, and did not mislead the defendant. The proof being that the plaintiff’s intestate came to his death while engaged in making a switch for the railroad company, although the same was not a ‘flying switch.’
“II.

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Bluebook (online)
47 S.E. 693, 68 S.C. 403, 1904 S.C. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-south-carolina-georgia-extension-r-r-sc-1904.