Criswell v. Railway Co.

6 S.E. 31, 30 W. Va. 798, 1888 W. Va. LEXIS 19
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 6 S.E. 31 (Criswell v. 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
Criswell v. Railway Co., 6 S.E. 31, 30 W. Va. 798, 1888 W. Va. LEXIS 19 (W. Va. 1888).

Opinion

GreeN, Judge :

This action on the case was brought by the administrator of Thomas Waldron, a track-repairer, against the Pittsburgh, Cincinnati & St. Louis Railway Company, to recover damages for the death of his intestate, caused by the neglect of the defendant by .negligently running a train of cars against a hand-car, on which said Waldron was traveling to a point at which he was to do work in repairing the defendant’s railroad. The suit was brought under our statute, to be found, chapter 104, §§ 5, 6, p. 708, Code W. Ya. 1887. The court overruled a demurrer to each of the four last counts of the declaration. No defects in these last four counts of the declaration were pointed out by the defendant’s counsel, and we see none. These counts did not state any one of the particular acts constituting the defendant’s negligence, but only, in general terms, that it negligently ran its train of cars over the hand-car on-which the plaintiff’s intestate, its employe, was traveling lawfully, thereby causing his death ; and none of them specifically stated that the plaintiff’s intestate was not guilty of contributory negligence. In some States, these omissions would have been held to be defects in these counts; but in this State it has been expressly decided that such omissions are not defects. See Hawker v. Railroad Co., 15 W. Va. 645; Snyder v. Railway Co., 11 W. Va. 14.

The plaintiff was granted, by the court below, three instructions to the jury, as follows; u Instruction No. 1. The jury are instructed that it is immaterial what rules .the defendant had adopted, unless they were brought to the [812]*812knowledge of the plaintiff’s decedent, Thomas Waldron. Instruction Wo. %. The jury are instructed that with respect to the question of contributory negligence on the part of Thomas Waldron the burden of proof is on the defendant. Instruction Wo. 8. The jury are instructed that the defendant was bound to take all reasonable precautions for the safety of the laborers employed by it on its track, including the plaintiff’s decedent, Thos. Waldron.”

To each of which the defendant excepted. The defendant’s counsel admit that instructions Nos. 1 and 3 propounded the law correctly, but insist that there was no evidence justifying the giving of them. I will show hereafter that there was evidence submitted to the jury which rendered it proper to give these instructions. Instruction No. 2, it is claimed, does not propound the law correctly, and that the burden of proving there was no contributory negligence was on the plaintiff. But this Court has decided that this instruction propounded the law correctly. See Snyder v. Railway Co., 11 W. Va. 14.

The defendant below asked six instructions to the jury, and one, No. 4, was granted, with a qualification, which was as follows: “ Defendant's Instruction Wo. 4. The jury are instructed that the defendant’s company had a right to prescribe rules relating to section foremen, and the jury can not consider or determine whether such rules were reasonable or not.” The qualification added by the court in giving this instruction was: “Provided, the jury further believe from the evidence that Thomas Waldron had knowledge of such rules, and continued in the service of the defendant with such knowledge.” The adding of this qualification, before the instruction was given, was excepted to by the defendant. If plaintiff’s instruction No. 1 lays down the law correctly, — and the defendant’s counsel admits that it does,— then this qualification of this instruction was necessary to make it consistent with plaintiff’s instruction Nó. 1; for without the qualification that Thomas Waldron had knowledge of such rules it would be immaterial, in this case, what these rules were. And to instruct the jury that the company had a right to make any rules and regulations, unless qualified as it was by the court, would obviously have tended to mislead the jury.

[813]*813The' court, refused to grant the following three instructions to the jury: “ Instruction No. 8. The company is not liable for an injury which happens to an employe in consequence of a disregard of its plain instructions. Instruction No. 9. The jury is instructed that the defendant company had a right to prescribe rules relating to section foremen and laborers upon the tracks, and the jury can not consider or determine whether such rules ai’e reasonable or not. Instruction No. 10. Under the rules of the defendant Nos. 401 and 402, it was not, at the date of the death of plaintiff’s decedent, the duty of the defendant to give notice to the laborers upon its tracks of the sending out of special or extra trainsto which the defendant excepted.

Instruction No. 8 ought not to have been granted, unless qualified as instruction No. 4 was, and, when so qualified, it would have been substantially the same as instruction No. 4, granted to the plaintiff and set out in the statement of this case. The instruction No. 9 was, when so qualified, precisely the same as instruction No. 4, which had been granted the plaintiff; and without this qualification, as I have shown, it ought not to have been granted. Instruction No. 10 was a simple construction of rules Nos. 401 and 402 of the defendant, as set out in the statement of the case, and they were perfectly plain in their meaning; but, as the plaintiff’s instruction No. 1 has said, it was entirely immaterial what they were, or what they meant, if they were unknown to the plaintiff’s intestate, Waldron; to have given this tenth instruction without this qualification would have misled the jury; and, if so qualified, it would have been of no possible aid to the jury, as the meaning of these rules was perfectly clear. Taking all of the instructions together, as stated in the statement of the case, those given and those refused and those qualified, they presented the law, so far as asked by either party, correctly to the jury.

It only remains to determine whether the court erred in refusing to grant the defendant a new trial. This will depend upon the law in reference to certain points in the case as to which neither party asked any instruction of the court, and which I will now consider. A master is not liable to his servant for negligence of his fellow-servant while en[814]*814gaged in the same common employment, unless he has been negligent in the selection of the servant in fault, or in retaining him after notice of his incompetency. See Shear & K. Neg. § 86. And a “ fellow-servant,!’ within the meaning of this rule, is generally held to be any one serving the same master and under his control, whether equal, inferior, or superior. Id. § 100. One to whom an employer commits the entire charge of his business, with power to choose his own assistants, and to control and discharge them as freely and fully as the principal himself could, has nevertheless been generally considered not a fellow-servant with those who are employed by him. But even this has not been universally held; as, for instance, the contrary is held in Massachusetts. Id. § 103. But in section 104 they give sound reasons, we think, to bring the case within the same rule, — when the master delegates to a superintendent a power to appoint but not remove, or to remove but not appoint; and they refer to an Ohio decision and Kentucky decision to sustain this position. And it is the view of other text-writers.

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Bluebook (online)
6 S.E. 31, 30 W. Va. 798, 1888 W. Va. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/criswell-v-railway-co-wva-1888.