Barnett v. Coal & Coke Railway Co.

94 S.E. 150, 81 W. Va. 251, 1917 W. Va. LEXIS 195
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 6, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 94 S.E. 150 (Barnett v. Coal & Coke Railway 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
Barnett v. Coal & Coke Railway Co., 94 S.E. 150, 81 W. Va. 251, 1917 W. Va. LEXIS 195 (W. Va. 1917).

Opinion

Williams, Judge:

J. W. Barnett, administrator of Homer L.- Keener, deceased, brought this action against the Coal & Coke Railway company to recover damages on account of the death of deceased, alleged to have been caused by its negligence. After all the evidence had been introduced the court, on motion of defendant, directed the jury to find a verdict for it, over the plaintiff’s objection, and later overruled his motion to set [253]*253aside the verdict and grant him a new trial, and entered judgment. The court’s rulings on these motions constitute the principal errors assigned.

The action is brought under the state or common law, and it is admitted defendant had paid nothing into the workmen’s compensation fund, provided by the Workmen’s Compensation Act for the benefit of injured employes. Defendant is engaged in both intrastate and interstate commerce, about ninety or ninety-five per centum of its business being of the latter class, although its entire line of railroad is within the State of West Virginia. , It maintains machine shops for the building and repairing of cars at Gassaway, and deceased, at the time of his injury, and for about a month prior thereto, was employed in the shops.- The shops consisted of a number of large- rooms through the walls of which open spaces or doorways were made for the passage of cars. It was the custom for the employes to push the cars, that were to be repaired or unloaded as the case -might be, from the transfer table to the places where they were to be repaired or unloaded, some of them pushing at the rear and others at the sides of the car. Deceased was crushed while pushing at the side of a car loaded with lumber, the space between the side of the car and the jamb of the door being too small for the passage of his body. There are a number of such doorways at the shops, and there is evidence tending to prove that, in some of them the tracks were laid closer to one side of the doorway than to the other; that some of them were wide enough for the body of a man, pushing at the side of a car, to pass without injury, and others were not. This condition constituted the negligence of which plaintiff complains.

Whether it was negligence, under all the facts and circumstances of the ease, is a mixed question of law and fact, which should have been submitted to the jury upon .proper instructions by the court respecting defendant’s legal duty to its employes. . If defendant had constructed all 6f its doorways, and had laid its tracks leading through them, so that all the spaces would have been obviously too narrow to allow a man to pass through safely at the side of a car, we could [254]*254perhaps then say, as matter of law, such construction would not have been negligent; or, if it had made the doors wide enough, and had laid its tracks so as to leave a space on either side of all the doors wide enough for a man’s body to pass safely, it would not have been negligent. But, to make the openings and lay the tracks so as to make some of them safe and others dangerous, but not obviously so, would seem to present a situation which would naturally invite.an employe into an unnecessary danger. It at least presents a question for the jury. It was defendant’s duty to use reasonable care to provide for its employes a reasonably safe place iii which to work. There does not appear to have been any necessity for constructing the doors and laying the tracks in the manner shown in the present case, and, therefore, as was said by Justice Day, in Choctaw &c. R. Co. v. McDade, 191 U. S. 64, there was no reason for subjecting deceased to dangers which were wholly unnecessary to the proper operation of defendant’s business. See also Kelleher v. Milwaukee &c. R. R. Co., 80 Wis. 584, where the death of a switchman was caused by the proximity of a shed to the tracks, which rendered the performance of his duties unnecessarily dangerous; and Georgia Pacific Ry. Co. v. Davis, 92 Ala. 300, where a brakeman was injured by a rock which was suffered to project too near to the track. And Hoffmeir v. Kansas City-Leavenworth R. Co., 68 Kan. 831, where the conductor of an electi’ic street railway was injured by one of the poles of defendant while he Avas on the footboard of the car collecting fares. In that case it appears the poles had been placed, unnecessarily, at irregular distances from the track. 1 Sher. & Redf. on Negligence, (6th ed.), Sec. 201. A case directly in point is Ferrens v. Old Colony R. R. Co., 143 Mass. 197. There defendant owned a building which stood in its yards and was used as a blacksmith shop. Opposite the door there Avas a track which, from the door to the corner of the building, a distance of about twenty-two feet, approached the building and came so near to it at the corner that there was not room for a man to pass between the side of a car and the building. Defendant Avas employed as a blacksmith and was accustomed, when called upon, to assist [255]*255m moving cars in the yard. He had been employed for many years and was familiar with the premises, but-had not assisted in moving cars on that particular track. When he took hold of the car to assist in moving it, he saw the building and the space between the track and the building but apparently did not appreciate the fact that there was not room enough for him to pass. In view of those facts and circumstances, the court held it could not rule, as matter of law, that defendant was not guilty of negligence in suffering the building to remain so near the track, or that plaintiff was guilty of negligence in attempting to pass through the space while assisting in moving the car. Texas & Pac. Ry. Co. v. Swearingen, 196 N. S. 51, is also in point. There a switchman was injured while in the. performance of his duty by striking aginst a scale box located in close proximity to a switch track. It was contended that he knew of the situation and had assumed the risk. But it was there held that the question of the railroad company’s alleged negligence in so locating the scale box, as well as the employe’s contributory negligence in not avoiding contact with it, he having previous knowledge of Its location, was a question for the jury.

What has already been said as well as many of the authorities "cited, applies not only to the alleged negligence of defendant, but also to the alleged contributory negligence of deceased. Although it is proven he had previously assisted in moving other cars about the shops, there is no evidence that he had ever assisted in moving a car over the particular track in question. There is some testimony to the effect that he was warned of the danger while he was pushing the car, but whether he heard the warning and appreciated the danger is not clear, for he made no reply and continued pushing at the side of the car. There were two door-ways through which the car had to pass, and he had just passed through the first one safely, and no doubt supposed he could likewise pass through the next one. But the space at the second one was several inches narrower than it was at the first, the difference, however, was not so -great as to be readily discerned at a distance, and there is some evidence that deceased was [256]*256leaning forward with his face down when he ivas pushing and at the instant he was caught in the narrow space.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 S.E. 150, 81 W. Va. 251, 1917 W. Va. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnett-v-coal-coke-railway-co-wva-1917.