Connelly v. Virginian Railway Co.

20 S.E.2d 885, 124 W. Va. 254, 1942 W. Va. LEXIS 75
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 7, 1942
Docket9229
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 20 S.E.2d 885 (Connelly v. Virginian 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
Connelly v. Virginian Railway Co., 20 S.E.2d 885, 124 W. Va. 254, 1942 W. Va. LEXIS 75 (W. Va. 1942).

Opinions

Kenna, Judge:

This action was instituted in the Circuit Court of Fay-ette County by the administratrix of Walter Connelly for the purpose of recovering damages for death by wrongful act against the Virginian Railway Company, M. L. Woods and Walker Hall, and resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of twenty-five hundred dollars against the railroad and Woods, Hall having been dropped before submission to the jury. This writ of error was granted upon the application of the remaining defendants.

*255 There are three grounds of assigned error, the second of which covers the giving on behalf of the plaintiff of two allegedly erroneous instructions, and the third the refusal to give five allegedly proper instructions on behalf of the defendant. Since, in our opinion, the trial court erred in refusing to direct a verdict for defendants, that question being covered by the first assignment of error, due to the' insufficiency of the plaintiff’s proof to sustain that verdict, it is unnecessary to consider the other assignments of error.

The following statement of facts is, of course, not exhaustive but, we hope, includes all salient circumstances, giving to the plaintiff the benefit of all conflicting testimony, save where there is a very clear preponderance for the defendant, and all reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom:

In the early afternoon of March 16, 1940, plaintiff’s decedent was struck and almost instantly killed by a coal train of the defendant on its Oak Hill Branch a little south of Summerlee in Fayette County. The train was composed of twenty-two loaded, and one empty, fifty-ton freight cars coupled to the front of the engine, the engine, the engine’s tank and a caboose attached to the back of the tank. It was on its daily run from Oak Hill Junction to Lochgelly and back, and, since there was no way of turning the engine on the Oak Hill Branch, was backing, followed by the loaded cars.and empty and preceded by the caboose and tank. The train crew consisted of a conductor, an engineer, a fireman and two brakemen, all of whom were on active duty in their appropriate positions excepting one brakeman, who, at the time of the accident and immediately preceding it, was eating a sandwich in the caboose. The decedent was on the railroad track of the defendant at the south end of what is called a side hill cut and at a point approximately eight hundred feet south of the crossing formed by the railroad and State Highway Number Eighteen, being south of Summerlee and north of Oak Hill. Between him and the approaching train there was what is called a reverse curve. At this point in *256 the direction toward Oak Hill, the roadbed of the defendant is on a one-half per cent downgrade, and the train was “drifting,” or moving without the application of power, its speed being between twelve and fifteen miles an hour.

Decedent had been with his two brothers operating their family truck and “picking up” coal that morning until about ten-thirty. It was Saturday and “pay day.” He left them near the Summerlee tipple and went to a nearby pool room where he stayed until between noon and one o’clock, and is known to have drunk three bottles of beer. He was wearing a red sweater with a white letter “O” on its front and a red “toboggan.” The only person, according to the record’s showing, who saw decedent alive after he left the pool room, in addition to the train crew, was a colored man around eighty years of age who lived near the place of the accident and went regularly in the early afternoon to a nearby spring to procure drinking water, and who was making his daily trip for that purpose at the time of the accident and witnessed the occurrence. This witness had died at the time of the trial, and his deposition, taken by the plaintiff, was used.

There is no contest concerning several pictures introduced by both the defendant and the plaintiff, the defendant’s map of its right of way near the scene, nor the distances on the ground. There is, however, considerable variance in the estimated eventual distances or relative positions of moving objects when different occurrences took place. The decedent was not standing when struck by the defendant’s caboose. We believe that the record discloses no material conflict in the testimony up to this point.

Although the testimony is in substantial agreement .as to Connelly’s location, there is a material conflict as to the posture occupied by him at the time of impact. As has already been stated, he was on the eastern, or left, side of the defendant’s rails in the direction that the train was moving. It is the contention of the plaintiff that he was sitting upon the end of the defendant’s ties, and that *257 of the defendant that he was lying upon the end of the ties with his head in the direction of the oncoming train. It is obvious that the contention of the plaintiff, if sustained, makes the decedent’s red sweater and cap far more conspicuous than would that of the defendant, and consequently, would result in it being far more likely' that the train crew of the defendant, either wantonly and knowingly injured him or by the exercise of a very slight degree of care could have realized the danger. Both counts of the declaration allege distinctly that Walter Connelly, at the time his injury occurred, was unconscious, so that it is unnecessary to discuss warnings of the train’s approach.

Under the admitted circumstances, we believe that the decedent certainly occupied the position of either a licensee or that of a trespasser, and that in either case, the defendant railroad company has not been shown to have failed to perform a duty that it owed him. It is not contended that Connelly occupied the position of an invitee. We think that there are certain very definite reasons for not regarding him as a licensee.

It is virtually admitted that the right of way, that is to say, the roadbed and trackage of the defendant between Summerlee and Oak Hill, had been used by the residents of the neighborhood for a number of years for their convenience in going and coming, and, in substance, that in so far as pedestrians were concerned, the railroad had acquiesced in that use by persons in normal condition and with normal faculties of observing and avoiding dangers. For the purposes of this case, the defendant undoubtedly was required in the location of the accident to maintain a reasonable lookout for that class of pedestrians. By acquiescing in their use of its exclusive right of way, it owed them, as distinguished from trespassers, that duty. We have been referred to no West Virginia case and have found none that further enlarges the owner’s duty to a licensee. The difficulty here that we pass over for the time being is to classify Connelly as a licensee.

For the sake of discussion, let us admit that Connelly, a *258 man of the age of thirty-eight, was sitting at the end of a sidehill cut upon a tie at the left of defendant’s track with his head in his arms wearing a red sweater and cap, unconscious as alleged, on a clear day in the early afternoon.

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Bluebook (online)
20 S.E.2d 885, 124 W. Va. 254, 1942 W. Va. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connelly-v-virginian-railway-co-wva-1942.