Callison v. Charleston & W. C. Ry. Co.

90 S.E. 260, 106 S.C. 123, 1916 S.C. LEXIS 266
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedOctober 20, 1916
Docket9548
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 90 S.E. 260 (Callison v. Charleston & W. C. Ry. Co.) 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
Callison v. Charleston & W. C. Ry. Co., 90 S.E. 260, 106 S.C. 123, 1916 S.C. LEXIS 266 (S.C. 1916).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Hydrick.

Defendant appeals from judgment for plaintiff for $1,000 damages to his person and automobile caused by collision with defendant’s locomotive on a street crossing.

The Southern Railway runs through Main street in the town of Greenwood, practically dividing it into two streets, one on either side of the railroad. Defendant’s road runs parallel with the Southern for some distance south of the business center of the town, and then curves to the right, going in a southwesterly course, and crosses the south side of Main street on a long curve, and at a very oblique angle with the street. About the middle of the street, a spur track branches off to the left going to a turntable. There is a great deal of travel over this crossing, especially in automobiles. ETnder ordinary conditions, one approaching it from the south, as plaintiff did, has an unobstructed view of it, and of the track approaching it from the north, as the engine did; but, at the time of the collision, it was raining very hard, and the plaintiff’s wind shield was up, so that his view of the crossing and track approaching it was obscured by the rain and water on his wind shield. *127 For the same reason the view of those on the engine was obscured.

Plaintiff testified that on.September 24, 1914, he was driving up the south side of Main street, going into Greenwood, at a moderate gait, and, when he approached this-crossing, he threw off the power of his engine, slowed down and looked to see if the crossing was clear. Seeing that it was he proceeded across, and, to cross the tracks at right angles, he steered his car to the left and crossed the spur track, and just as the front wheels of his car got on the main line, he saw the engine coming upon him, .and, before he could get off the track, it struck the front part of his car, and the impact threw him against the back of the seat. That, at the time, he did not think he had sustained any personal injury, and so told the engineer and fireman, who came to his assistance, after they had stopped the engine; but afterwards his back began to hurt him and continued to hurt him, and after a month or so he consulted his physician, but his back continued to hurt him up to the time of the trial. He said he was alert on the occasion, but heard no signal of the approaching engine—no sound of bell or whistle, nor noise of the moving engine and train of freight cars which it was drawing. The engine was not going very fast, and he thought it must have been coasting downgrade to have been moving so noiselessly. There was nothing to prevent his hearing the noise of the train, except the noise made by his own engine and car, the rain, and the running of the machinery of a near-by oil mill.

The engineer testified that the train was moving about three or four miles an hour. The fireman was looking ahead and ringing the bell. He, too, was looking ahead, and could see the track the distance of five or six car lengths ahead, except the track immediately in front of the engine, the view of which was cut off by the pump on the engine, and, at the rate the train was moving, he could have stopped within the distance of a car length. He was on the right- *128 hand side of the cab, and did not see plaintiff’s automobile, which approached from the other side, until after he had struck it. The fireman ran to his side and said, “You hit an automobile,” and he stopped and asked plaintiff what the trouble was, and he replied, “I just didn’t see you; I don’t blame anybody at all.” The curtains of the automobile were up.

The fireman testified that he was ringing the bell and looking ahead, but the rain and water on the glass of the cab window and curvature of the track prevented him from seeing very far—not more than half a car length-—-ahead of the engine, and he did not see plaintiff’s automobile until the engine was about to strike it; heard plaintiff tell the engineer that he did not blame anyone for the accident; that his curtains and wind shield were up, and it was raining, and he couldn’t see them; he was sure the curtains were up, and he was ringing the bell.

Two other witnesses, employees of defendant, testified that the plaintiff told them, a short time after the accident, on the same day, that he did not blame anybody for it; that it was raining, and he had his wind shield and curtains up, and did not see the train until he was on the track. ' Plaintiff denied this, and denied telling the engineer so, and denied, also, that his' curtains were up.

The jury viewed the scene of the accident, and, at request of defendant’s attorneys, plaintiff got into an automobile and demonstrated, in presence of the jury, how he was driving at the time of the collision.

1 The first assignment of error is in the refusal of defendant’s motion for a directed verdict. Was the evidence sufficient to warrant a reasonable jury in finding a verdict for plaintiff? This Court has, time and again, laid . down that as the test of the evidence or standard by which it must be considered in deciding motions for a nonsuit or directed verdict. This standard requires that verdicts must be supported by material evidence and be *129 founded upon reason, and not upon surmise, conjecture or caprice.

2 We consider, first, whether there was evidence which warranted a reasonable finding that defendant was guilty of recklessness, wilfulness or wantonness, because, if there was such evidence, we must conclude that the jury so found, if that conclusion be necessary to support a general verdict for plaintiff.

3, 4 The failure of a railroad company to give the signals required by statute at a public crossing is negligennce per se; moreover, it is sufficient to warrant a reasonable inference of recklessness, wilfulness, or wantonness, and therefore sufficient to carry that issue to the jury. No doubt, in some instances, it may be the result of mere inadvertence; if so, it would be negligence only; but, when the positive command or prohibition of a statute is violated or disobeyed, it is deemed sufficient to require, submission to the jury of the question whether, under all the circumstances, it was the result of mere inadvertence, or of indifference to the rights of those who travel the highways, or a conscious failure to be careful for their safety. The reason upon which the rule is based is that, when anything is commanded or prohibited by legislative authority, every one is conclusively presumed to know it and is bound to act accordingly, and, the matter having been brought to his attention in such a solemn and impressive way, his violation or disobedience cannot be entirely excused, and therefore it amounts at the least, to negligence; and, while it may be negligence only, it is also enough to warrant a reasonable inference that it was due to indifference to the command or prohibition, or to a conscious disregard thereof, and of the rights of those intended to be safeguarded thereby. True, the facts and circumstances may repel such an inference, but it is for the jury to decide whether they do or not, unless the evidence is susceptible of but one inference.

*130 5

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Bluebook (online)
90 S.E. 260, 106 S.C. 123, 1916 S.C. LEXIS 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/callison-v-charleston-w-c-ry-co-sc-1916.