Dimmey v. W. Va. Traction & Electric Co.

99 S.E. 93, 83 W. Va. 755, 1919 W. Va. LEXIS 226
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 99 S.E. 93 (Dimmey v. W. Va. Traction & Electric 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
Dimmey v. W. Va. Traction & Electric Co., 99 S.E. 93, 83 W. Va. 755, 1919 W. Va. LEXIS 226 (W. Va. 1919).

Opinion

POEFENBARGER, JUDGE:

•The inquiries arising upon this writ of error to a judgment for the defendant, rendered on a directed verdict in an action for personal injuries, are,. (l) .whether the defendant was negligent, and (2), if so, -whether the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence barring right of recovery.

The defendant owned and operated a double-track electric railway on a public highway known as the National Road on which the plaintiff’s residence property abutted. This traction line extended from a point on or near the boundary line between Pennsylavnia and West Virginia and close to the town of West Alexander, Washington County, Pennsylvania, to the City of Wheeling. For the most part, it was located on the National Road, but at certain places it seems to have deviated therefrom. Immediately in front of the Dimmey residence, however, it _ was entirely on the public highway. At least, the jury could have found from the evidence that it was. What is called the inbound track was on the side of the road nearest the plaintiff’s residence, and the rail of that track nearest the residence is only about' four feet distant from the gate and the property line. Along the front of the residence property, there was an iron.fence hav-[757]*757bag three gates, a small one in front of the house, a double one in front of the stable about fifty or sixty feet east of the house and another about thirty-five or forty feet west of the small gate. 'Within the yard and at a distance of five or seven feet from the fence there was a row of trees about twelve years old. A short distance east of the stable, there was a slight curve of the road and railway track toward the north, but they came back into view from the yard at a distance of three or four hundred feet or less.' Plaintiff’s husband testified that the track was not visible for some distance beyond the- stable, from any point within the yard or from the gate, but he admitted that it was visible throughout the length of the curve, from the track in front of the gate. He further said cars approaching from the east could be seen from , the gate, at a distance of only about seventy-five feet, on account of the curve, but did not say what obstructed the view of the curve.

• The plaintiff was injured on the 10th day of July, 1916, at about five o’clock P. M., while endeavoring-to cross the defendant’s tracks, to obtain bread from a baker’s wagon standing in the highway beyond them and in front of her residence. Coming from her house to the gate, she held up two fingers to indicate" to the baker that she desired two loaves of bread. Looking to the east after having arrived at the gate,’ or while on the way to it, she- discovered an inbound car approaching, aiid looldng to the west, she saw an outbound car coming. After having waited until both had passed the gate, she made one or two steps from the gate and was struck by another inbound car following the one that had'first passed, and severely injured. She.says the first inbound ear and the outbound car passed each other at a point'about thirty-five or forty feet west of the front gate and that she stepped out from the gate just as the rear of the outbound car passed it. Tf she is correct in this, the car that struck her must have been within fifty or sixty feet of the gate at the time at which the other two cars passed each other. ’ She did not-reach the track at all. It was only-about four feet from the gate and the overhang of the car left a space of only about two feet between it and the gate, and it [758]*758struck her as soon as she stepped outside of the gate. The situation in whieh she was found after it had passed tends to confirm her statement as to her position at the instant of contact. She was found not on the track, but to the right of it, near the fence and fifteen or twenty feet from the gate. She may be mistaken as to the position of the outgoing car at the instant of her fatal step, for the baker and his grandson both say their -view of her and the gate was obstructed by the outgoing car at the time of the accident. They say the second inbound car was about six feet from the gate, when their view was shut off by the outbound car.

All of the cars were running at the rate of about twenty-five or thirty miles per hour. The plaintiff swears the first inbound car sounded its gong before it reached the gate, but that the other did not do so nor give any warning of its approach. The baker and his grandson say the second one sounded its gong at or near the gate. Witness G-uimar who was a passenger on the. car says it neither rang its bell nor blew its whistle. At that point, the ears ordinarily ran at the rate of twenty or thirty miles per hour, and they sometimes gave warning of their approach, but did not always do so-. The testimony of the conductor on the car that struck the plaintiff will bear the inference that there was no definite rule of the company as to warning of the approaches of cars to the gate in question. He said that depended largely upon the man running the ear and that some of the motormen gave warning and others did not. A witness who had been a motorman of the company both before and after the injury testified that he had had no instruction as to warning of approaches at the gates, but had been instructed to ring the gong at crossings. Ordinarily, the ears ran in each direction, at intervals of seven to ten minutes, but they often ran very close together, and the plaintiff was fully advised as to the method of operating them.

' Whether, under the circumstances stated, the defendant was negligent depends in part upon certain legal principles. Of course, there can be no negligence on the part of one who has- omitted no legal duty, nor invaded any legal right of another. Hence, upon every inquiry as to the existence of [759]*759negligence, it is necessary to ascertain the relative rights of the parties. A railroad company operating its cars on tracks laid in a public highway has no exclusive right of use of the highway or the part so used by it. Its situation is entirely different from that of a railroad company operating its cars on a right of way exclusively owned by it. The plaintiff had as clear and-firm a right to cross the highway, at the point at which she was injured, as the defendant had to operate its ears there. She was in no sense either a trespasser or a mere licensee. While the law of the road is not fully operative* under such circumstances, its general principles apply just as they do at highway crossings of steam railroads. The law imposes upon pedestrians and others using public highways in which railways are operated, the duty of constant and vigilant care and prudence for their own safety. At the same time, it imposes upon the railway company duty, ■ through its agents and servants in charge of its cars, to maintain a constant and careful lookout for persons and property in the highway, and to adopt such rules, regulations and methods of operation as are reasonably necessary to prevent injury to them. Riedel v. Traction Company, 69 W. Va. 18; 63 W. Va. 522; City Railway Co. v. Thompson, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 16; Ashley v. Kanawha Valley Traction Co., 60 W. Va. 306; Shea v. St. Raul City Ry. Co., 50 Minn. 395; Fenner v. Traction Company, 202 Pa. 265; Consolidated Traction Co. v. Haight, 59 N. J. L. 577; Mitchell v. Railway & Motor Co., 9 Wash. 120; Murphy v. Street Railway Co., 73 Conn. 249; Cowley v. Railway Co., 106 Wis. 239; Shea v. Railroad Co., 44 Cal. 414; Rasher v. Railway Co.,

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Bluebook (online)
99 S.E. 93, 83 W. Va. 755, 1919 W. Va. LEXIS 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dimmey-v-w-va-traction-electric-co-wva-1919.