Bedenbaugh v. Southern Ry.

48 S.E. 53, 69 S.C. 1, 1904 S.C. LEXIS 87
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 21, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 48 S.E. 53 (Bedenbaugh v. Southern Ry.) 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
Bedenbaugh v. Southern Ry., 48 S.E. 53, 69 S.C. 1, 1904 S.C. LEXIS 87 (S.C. 1904).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Chieb Justice Pope.

This is an action instituted *3 in the Court of Common Pleas for Newberry County on the 39th of May, 1901, for $30,000 damages, on account of personal injury received by plaintiff at Columbia, S. C., on the 9th of June, 1898. The case was tried before Honorable C. G. Dantzler, Judge, and a jury, at the July term, 1903. The jury rendered a verdict for $3,000 in favor of the plaintiff against Southern Railway Company, upon which judgment was duly entered. The complaint sets forth three causes of action. The theory of the first cause of action is, that the plaintiff, as a licensee, was upon the railroad track of the defendant railway when he received his injury from a collision with the engine of the defendant railway, which necessitated the amputation of his foot above the ankle. It is alleged that such injury resulted from the carelessness and negligence of the two defendants.

The theory of the second cause of action is the same as the first, except that his injury was due not only to the negligence of the two defendants, but to their wilfulness also.

The theory of the third cause of action is that the railway track of the Southern Railway Company lies longitudinally in Wayne street from Gervais street to the point and beyond where the plaintiff was injured, and that the plaintiff had a right, as a citizen of South Carolina, and a resident of the city of Columbia, to- be walking on the track of the defendant railway company, at the point where he was injured; his rights and the rights of the railway company in the street being mutual in so far as the law was concerned; that the defendant, Outlaw, was the engineer on the engine of the railway, defendant, at the time of plaintiff’s injury.

Testimony was introduced by the plaintiff tending to1 show that between the hour of eight and one-half and nine o’clock, on the 9th day of June, 1898, the plaintiff with a friend was returning from a visit of business and pleasure in the heart of the city of Columbia to the mill village of the Granby Mills, where he and his family resided; and that in making such return to his home he and his friend passed down Gervais street as far as the old passenger shed of the Columbia *4 and Greenville Railway, now owned by the Southern Railway Company, and thence passed down Wayne street, which said Wayne street was used as a thoroughfare by a large number of citizens, both in going from and returning ta the aforesaid mill village, both by day and by night. That over the said Wayne street the city of Columbia, within the limits of which the said Wayne street was located, had granted the privilege of its occupation, provided that such occupation of said street by the defendant railway should not interfere with the right of pedestrians to traverse said street. That said Wayne street was one of the streets of the city of Columbia, the title to which was vested in certain commissioners and their successors in office, in fee simple, for the use of the State of South Carolina, by the act of the General Assembly of said State, passed in 1786. (See vol. 4 of the Statutes at Large, at page 753.) That while Wayne was only partially completed as a street about where the injury to plaintiff occurred, yet other parts of the said street were placed in a condition for general travel by the people, having sidewalks constructed therein, with dwellings on each side of said Wayne street. That said plaintiff was sober at the time of his accident, and was overtaken by the defendant’s railway engine, without any headlight being lighted or any bell being rung, and that defendant, Outlaw, plainly saw plaintiff before the collision above referred bo; and that the said engineer told the plaintiff immediately after his injury that he did see him, but concluded to scare him by continuing his passage down said Wayne street with the engine running between six, seven or eight miles an hour, in the belief that plaintiff would get off of said track; and that such conduct on the part of the engineer was a wanton, wilful and reckless disregard of plaintiff’s rights. That the plaintiff would have gotten off of said railroad track if he had heard the approach of said engine before the accident.

The defendant’s testimony tended to show that it was a dark and rainy night, and that the engineer did not see the *5 plaintiff on the railway track until at a distance of eight or ten feet from the plaintiff, at which junction the engineer blew his whistle and reversed his engine in order that the plaintiff might not be injured. That as soon as the plaintiff was injured, two or three of the employees of said railway, to wit: Outlaw, the engineer, and Thomas, the conductor, together with Mr. Dale, of the Atlantic Coast Dine Railway, reached the plaintiff about the same time, and placed him upon the tender of the engine, carrying him at once to the railroad hospital, near the Charlotte, Columbia and Augusta station, where a surgeon, Dr. Taylor, was summoned to and did render proper medical assistance. That the plaintiff and his friend, Mr. Yarn, had been drinking, as appeared from the odor of whiskey on them respectively. That the headlight on said engine was burning and that the whistle was being blown and the bell being rung at the time of the injury.

It should have been stated before, when reference was made to the testimony, that the answer of each one of the defendants was a general denial of the allegations of the complaint. The defendant railway company, however, supplemented the first defense of general denial by a second defense; that the plaintiff had gone upon said railroad track without the consent or knowledge of the said railway company, and was a trespasser thereon; and that on account of plaintiff’s imprudent and improper and unlawful conduct in so being upon, its track, he was injured, and that his injury arose from his own negligence and default. That by the said conduct of the said plaintiff in going upon said railroad track, he contributed to and brought about his own injury.

After the conclusion of the testimony of the parties, plaintiff and defendant, each side made requests to charge, and the whole charge of the Judge is as follows:

“The plaintiff in this action, Robert Bedenbaugh, brings this suit against the Southern Railway Company and W. R. Outlaw to recover $20,000 on account of the alleged wrongs mentioned and described in the complaint. It is alleged, substantially, that while the plaintiff was walking along upon *6 the railroad track of the Southern Railway Company, codefendant of W. F. Outlaw, alleged also to- be a street of the city of Columbia, in this State, that he was injured by the defendant in the manner mentioned and described in the complaint; that this injury was due, it is alleged, to the carelessness of these defendants., and also- to their wanton disregard of his rights, reckless disregard of his rights, intentional disregard of his rights.

“Now, Mr. Foreman and gentlemen, you are to inquire into this case, having settled first, that the plaintiff was injured, what causes led to his injury; whose fault was it? Was- it the fault of these defendants or of either of them, or was it due to- his own negligence? That should be your inquiry in this case.

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Bluebook (online)
48 S.E. 53, 69 S.C. 1, 1904 S.C. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bedenbaugh-v-southern-ry-sc-1904.