Brown v. Powell

18 S.E.2d 212, 198 S.C. 403, 1941 S.C. LEXIS 96
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 29, 1941
Docket15345
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 18 S.E.2d 212 (Brown v. Powell) 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
Brown v. Powell, 18 S.E.2d 212, 198 S.C. 403, 1941 S.C. LEXIS 96 (S.C. 1941).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Acting Associate Justice G. Duncan Bellinger.

This is a suit instituted by the respondent in the Court below in her representative capacity as administratrix of the estate of Pharoah C. Brown, deceased, against the Receivers of the Seaboard Air Dine Railway Company for the recovery of damages, both actual and punitive, alleged to have been suffered by respondent as the result pf the destruction of an automobile owned and operated by her intestate at the time of its collision with a train of box cars then being-owned and operated by the appellants. The collision out of which this action arose occurred at a point where State Highway No. 175 crosses the tracks of the appellants about 300 yards north of the Town of Centenary, in Marion County.

The allegations of appellants’ negligence, recklessness and willfulness specified in the complaint are as follows:

(a) In leaving a train of box cars standing motionless, at night, across a much-traveled public highway for an unreasonable length of time; (b) in leaving a train of box cars standing motionless at night across a much-traveled public highway for a greater period of time than permitted by the statute laws of this State; (c) in failing to place lights in the said highway or on the said train so as to warn respondent’s intestate, and the other traveling public of the presence of a train standing- at night across the said much-used highway; (d) in failing to place a flagman or other employee at the said crossing- to warn respondent’s intestate, and the other traveling public of the presence of a train standing at night across the said much-used highway; (e) in failing to give warning by bell, whistle, or otherwise, of the said motionless train standing at night across the said much-used highway; (f) in permitting a train to be operated through the State of South Carolina without sufficient number of men *406 in its crew to furnish proper lights, signals, and warning to respondent’s intestate, and others of the traveling public; (g) in failing to cut the said train standing across the said much used public highway so as to clear the same for respondent’s intestate’s automobile and other vehicular travel within a reasonable time.

The appellants in their answer admitted certain formal matter plead in the complaint, and also that a collision occurred between the automobile of respondent’s intestate and the train of cars of the appellants, and that the automobile was demolished, but the appellants deny the remaining allegations set forth in respondent’s complaint, and by way of affirmative defense plead that the collision was due to the contributory recklessness, willfulness, wantonness, and unlawful conduct of the respondent’s intestate.

The case came on for trial before Honorable Wm. H. Grimball, presiding Judge, and a jury, at the November, 1940, term of the Court of Common Pleas for Marion County, and resulted in a verdict for respondent for both actual and punitive damages. At the conclusion of respondent’s testimony, the appellants moved for a nonsuit upon the following grounds:

“(1) In no view of the case has the plaintiff established any right to recover punitive damages, and there is nothing upon which a verdict for punitive damages could properly be based. . . ,
“(2) There is a failure of any such evidence of either negligence or willfulness, wantonness or recklessness on the part of the defendant as would justify the submitting of defendant’s alleged negligence or willfulness, wantonness or recklessness to-the jury.
“(3) The only reasonable inference of which the testimony in the case is susceptible is that the plaintiff’s intestate himself was guilty of such negligence, willfulness, wantonness or recklessness or of such gross or willful negligence as to defeat any right of the plaintiff to recover.
*407 “(4) Because it appears from the evidence that if plaintiff’s intestate had been driving at a.lawful rate of speed he could have stopped upon seeing the train, whereas he drove up to the railroad crossing at a high, reckless, and dangerous rate of speed, in excess of that allowed by law, and such violation of law on his. part was grossly negligent and reckless, and contributed to his injury as a proximate cause thereof.”

The trial Judge overruled appellants’ motion for a non-suit, but withdrew from the jury’s consideration, because of failure of evidence to support them, the specifications of negligence, willfulness, wantonness, and recklessness of the appellants in the particulars set forth in Paragraph 3 of the complaint, alleging (b) the blocking of the highway at night for a greater period of time than permitted under the law; (e) in failing to give a warning of the standing of the train of cars across the highway, and (f) in operating the train without a sufficient crew of men to furnish proper lights, signals, and warnings to the traveling public. The ruling of the trial Judge left for the consideration of the jury only the specifications contained in Paragraph 3 of the complaint, designated as (a),' (c),■ (d),■ and (g). It will be noted that the specifications set forth in (e) and (g) in said paragraph are in effect the same, as both allege, in different wording, the blocking of the highway by appellants’, train of cars.

The allegations of negligence, recklessness' and willfulness remaining in the complaint may be stated as follows: (1) Blocking the highway for an unreasonable length of time'; (2) failure to place lights to-.warn travelers on the highway; (3) failure to place a flagman or other employees to warn travelers on the highway.

The appellants, at-the conclusion of all of the testimony, moved for a directed verdict upon the same grounds urged in the motion for nonsuit.- This motion was overruled by the trial Judge, and the case submitted to the jury as to both actual and punitive-damages.

*408 Upon rendition of the jury’s verdict, which found both actual and punitive damages in favor of the respondent; the appellants moved for a new trial, urging the same grounds upon which was based the motions for a nonsuit and a directed verdict, ■ with the additional ground that the verdict of the jury was excessive. The trial Judge refused this motion

The appellants bring eighteen exceptions, but the questions raised are stated by the appellants to be as follows:

(1) Was there error in refusing appellants’ motions for nonsuit and directed verdict based upon failure of proof of actionable negligence, willfulness, wantonness or recklessness ?

(2) Was there error in refusing appellants’ motions for nonsuit and directed verdict based upon contributory negligence and contributory willfulness, wantonness or recklessness?

(3) Was there error in refusing appellants’ motions for nonsuit and directed verdict at least as to punitive damages, and in refusing to charge the jury as requested by appellants, that punitive damages could not be awarded ?

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Bluebook (online)
18 S.E.2d 212, 198 S.C. 403, 1941 S.C. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-powell-sc-1941.