Dahmer v. State Fair of West Virginia, Inc.

91 S.E.2d 453, 141 W. Va. 517, 1956 W. Va. LEXIS 8
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1956
DocketNo. 10748
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 91 S.E.2d 453 (Dahmer v. State Fair of West Virginia, Inc.) 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
Dahmer v. State Fair of West Virginia, Inc., 91 S.E.2d 453, 141 W. Va. 517, 1956 W. Va. LEXIS 8 (W. Va. 1956).

Opinion

Riley, Judge:

Martin Dahmer, Jr., Administrator of the estate of Martin Van Burén Dahmer, deceased, instituted in the Circuit Court of Greenbrier County this action of trespass on the case against The State Fair of West Virginia, a corporation, hereinafter sometimes referred to as “State Fair”, to recover damages of ten thousand dollars for decedent’s death allegedly occasioned by State Fair’s negligent failure to provide decedent with a reasonably safe place in which to work. The jury having returned a verdict for the full amount sought to be recovered, and the trial court having entered judgment thereon, State Fair prosecutes this writ of error to that judgment.

The decedent, Martin Van Burén Dahmer, had been employed as a special officer by State Fair at its race track, situated half-way between Lewisburg and Ron-ceverte in Greenbrier County, and was so employed on August 29, 1953, the date on which he was fatally injured when struck by a riderless, runaway horse during a race.

For many years prior to August 29, 1953, State Fair had operated a county fair in Greenbrier County, which was generally regarded by residents of the entire State [519]*519of West Virginia as the “State Fair”. Its operation, suspended during World War II and resumed thereafter, included the maintenance and operation of a race track. The locale of the accident, which resulted in decedent’s death, is depicted both in photographs introduced by plaintiff (Exhibits Nos. 1 to 5, inclusive) and by testimony of the witnesses. The race track, lying between an infield fence and an outfield fence, was fifty-five or fifty-six feet in width at the point where decedent was injured. The record shows that in front of the grandstand at the race track there was a picket fence approximately four feet high, at the south end of which there was a three-plank fence thirty-four inches in height running down to the gate at which decedent was stationed at the time of his injury; the gate, described as a plank gate, was two inches higher than the fence which, proceeding in a southerly direction and following a rise in the ground, attained a height of forty-two to forty-six inches. According to defendant’s testimony, there was a strip of grass approximately thirty inches wide directly in front of and adjacent to the grandstand; the width of this grassy strip increased until at the gate its width was from seven to eight feet; and south of that point the strip tapered down to approximately six to six and one-half feet.

On August 29, 1953, the date of injury, decedent was an employee of State Fair, his assignment as a special policeman being inside the race track. His station or territory was along the track’s outside fence near the gate, through which the horses were led, and a small ticket oifice or booth, bearing the legend “Horse-Show Tickets.” Although defendant’s witness, Robert E. Sydenstricker, testified that decedent applied to him, as secretary of State Fair, for work in 1946, conditioning it upon his being assigned to the station at which he sustained his injury because he had “had that job * * * back in the 30’s”, witness, O. K. Pyles, who was in charge of State Fair’s special police, related that he assigned decedent to the particular post for the week during which [520]*520decedent was injured, because of Dahmer’s familiarity with it and that decedent did not request it. Asked what decedent’s duties were, Pyles answered, “To keep the public off the fence and off the race track, * * to watch people at all times at that post”, to “keep the crowd back”, and “to open the gate” so that the horses could enter or leave the race track. Curtis Shawver, under whose direction Pyles worked, described decedent’s duties to be “To protect the public and, at the same time, to protect himself”, and to see that the gate remained closed during the actual running of the races. Both Pyles and Shawver were positive in their testimony that decedent’s duties did not include management of the race horses, and that he had nothing to do with the actual running of races or with the horses entered in the races. While Shawver related that he did not instruct decedent individually as to his duties, he “did in the entire group”, and that decedent was in the group. On the other hand there is evidence that decedent had instructed a fellow-guard of the danger of his position, and that he had known horses to fall down and to be “on the lookout”.

A large crowd attended the races on Saturday, August 29, 1953. Eeverend Emory A. McGraw, another special police employed by State Fair, told the jury that the crowd along the fence was packed “about as close as you could get them.” The last race of the day and of the Fair took place about four-thirty in the afternoon, a five-eighths mile running race. Decedent was then at his station and, as one witness stated, was sitting on a “pop crate” at the gate until the race started, and then he “was up and was standing there.” According to defendant’s witness, Joe McWhorter, the timer of the races, who at the start of the race, was stationed in the judges’ stand, noticed that the saddle on one of the horses - a gray one - began to slip about one-sixteenth of a mile from the start, the jockey rolled under “went off - you might say, between the gate going into the grandstand on the south side of the grandstand.” The horse kept running “perfectly straight”. Continuing [521]*521without a jockey, the horse struck decedent, and, according to plaintiff’s witnesses McGraw and Ernest Kerns, also employed as a special police, the horse continued around the track and came back a second time, at which time he was “still running rather wild”, and would have run over decedent again if someone had not “sort of wave(d) him away.” The horse on the first trip around the track inflicted the injuries of which decedent died two days later. As detailed by Dr. Philip W. Oden, the attending physician, Dahmer “was in a marked condition of shock and he had compound com-minuted fractures of both bones of the left leg and he had two vertebrae of the back fractured”, and seven ribs on the right side of the chest crushed. Required surgery was unsuccessful, and death, according to this physician, resulted from the injury.

The parties stipulated, out of the jury’s presence, that State Fair “was not a subscriber to and was not paying into the Workmen’s Compensation Fund of the State of West Virginia” on the day of the injury.

While it is clear from the evidence that the runaway horse struck or ran over the decedent, the witnesses are not in agreement as to where on the race track this occurred. Plaintiff’s witness McGraw, who placed himself as a special policeman on the inside of the track between decedent and the grandstand when the accident occurred, testified that decedent was only three feet from the fence when he was struck by the horse, and that he had moved from the fence where he had been standing toward the track a distance of three feet. Ernest Kerns, another of plaintiff’s witnesses, fixed the distance as “two or three feet from the fence”, and James Edwards and Forrest Foster, both witnesses for plaintiff, stated the distance as between three and four feet of the fence and three feet, respectively. According to another witness, Martin Clark, testifying for the plaintiff, who was standing approximately twelve feet back of the fence and that same distance from decedent, the distance “seemed about four or five feet from the rail[522]

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Bluebook (online)
91 S.E.2d 453, 141 W. Va. 517, 1956 W. Va. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dahmer-v-state-fair-of-west-virginia-inc-wva-1956.