Downey v. C. & O. Railway Co.

28 W. Va. 732, 1886 W. Va. LEXIS 112
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 6, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 28 W. Va. 732 (Downey v. C. & O. 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
Downey v. C. & O. Railway Co., 28 W. Va. 732, 1886 W. Va. LEXIS 112 (W. Va. 1886).

Opinion

Snyder, Judge:

Action brought December 24, 1880, in the circuit court of Cabell county by John W. Downey against the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Company to recover damages for injuries received by the plaintiff through the alleged negligence of the defendant. On June 24, 1881, there was a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $5,000.00, on which the court entered judgment. The defendant demurred to each count of the declaration, which demurrer the court overruled. After the evidence had been introduced, the plaintiff submitted three instructions to each of which the defendant objected, but the court overruled the objection, and the instructions were giveu to the jury. The defendant then asked twenty-two instructions, numbered from one to twenty-two inclusive, to each of which the plaintiff objected. The court overruled the objection to Nos. 1, 2, 4, 6, 10, 11 and 12, and permitted these to goto the jury, but sustained the objection to all the others and excluded them from the jury. After [734]*734the verdict had been returned, the defendant moved the court to set the same aside, which motion the court overruled. To each and all of said rulings the defendant duly excepted. In order to have said rulings reviewed by this Court, the defendant obtained this writ of error.

The declaration contains two counts, the first of which alleges,that the plaintiff was one of a number of skilled laborers in the service and employment of the defendant at its machine-shops and round-house in the city of Huntington, and upon its engines and carriages, for hire and reward ; that the defendant had agreed, in consideration of such employment, to carry and convey said laborers by proper engines and carriages to and from its depot in said city to and from its machine-shops and round-house without additional or other reward or compensation ; and that while the plaintiff was being conveyed under said agreement he was injured by the mere negligence and misconduct of the defendant and in violation of said agreement. The second count alleges that, at the time of the injury, the plaintiff was being carried as a passenger by the defendant upon its railway, and the injury was caused by the negligence and default of the defendant without any fault or negligence on his part.

I have carefully examined the declaration and think the demurrer thereto was rightly overruled

The plaintiff on the trial offered evidence tending to prove the following facts: The plaintiff was twenty-five years of age and was, at the time the injury occurred, employed by the defendant as an apprentice blacksmith and was working at the machine-shops of the defendant at Huntington, and had been so working for eight years. His wages were from $1.00 to $1.35 per day. On August 29, 1880, he was on engine No. 29, sitting on the pilot or cow-catcher, with his legs hanging down in front. The train wras made up of the engine and tender, one combination car and one box car without seats. The combination car would seat about thirty persons. The engine was in the rear of the cars next to the box car, with which it was connected by a draw-bai\ In this condition the cars were being pushed over the road by the engine. On the morning of the accident, this train left the depot [735]*735shortly after six o’clock with about eighty employes of the defendant upon it to be conveyed to the shops. There were not enough seats for all; some went into the cars, some on top, some on the engine and tender, and the plaintiff and one Dixon got on the pilot. The engineer could see plaintiff sitting on the pilot, and did not tell him to get off. Plaintiff had ridden on trains about all the time he had been in the employ of the defendant. The cars furnished for the hands to go to and from the shops were sometimes a flat, sometimes coal-jimmies, box car and passenger car. Men would get on wherever they could and as they could. The track was bad on the line between the depot and shops; there were five switches and the distance was about three miles. The injury occurred at the “Y.” The train was running about eighteen or twenty miles per hour — was going southeast and -was struck in front by engine No. 23 going-southwest. It was quite foggy. The engineer of No. 29 could not see over the cars in the direction he was running. The train attached to and running in front of engine No. 29 was run into by engiue No. 23 at the “Y.” In the collision the plaintiff’s arm was caught between the draw-bar of the car and smokestack bar-brace on right side of brace; he was between the flagstaff and smokestack brace; his left arm caught in brace and right arm was hold of flagstaff; and his feet hanging over cow-catcher; his arm was mashed near the shoulder so that it had to be amputated above the elbow. He was sick for forty-eight days, from August 9, 1880; his health was good before the injury and not very good since. Before going upon the train thatmorning plaintiff went to the combination-car, looked in the door and saw no vacant seats; all the seats were occupied so far as he saw; he then came back, met Dixon and they got on the pilot; Dixon got off the pilot before the accident; the train first stopped at coal tipple where eight or ten men got off, next at oil shed, and again at engine works; men got off from different parts of the train at all these places; plaintiff might have gotten off at any of these places if he had hurried, but he preferred to remain where he was to running the risk of going to the car. He never saw or heard any orders of the company as to riding on car or engine.

[736]*736Ou the other hand, the defendant introduced evidence tending to prove the following facts : The plaintiff while sitting on the pilot was told by Dixon to get off of it, that it was a dangerous place, but plaintiff refused to do so and Dixon then got off and left him there. The plaintiff knew the rules of the defendant, and that they prohibited any of the shop-hands from riding on the engine; a printed notice of these rules being posted up in engine Ho. 23 ; it had no contract to carry the plaintiff or other shop-hands to and from their work, but did so gratuitously when it chose to do so at all-; the pilot of the engine is a very dangerous place for any one to be and its rules forbid anyone to occupy it; there was no necessity for the plaintiff to ride on the pilot; there was plenty of standing room in the cars where the plaintiff could have safely ridden; no one except the plaintiff and one Mathews was seriously injured by the collision, and Mathews, at the time, was riding on top of the freight car; the train was not at the time running up to the speed allowed by the schedule, but only about ten miles per hour; there were vacant seats in the train at the time the plaintiff was hurt, and he had ample time during the times when the train stopped to let men get off to have gotten off the pilot and gone into the ear; and no one was hurt in any of the cars by the collision.

The plaintiff’s instructions given to the jury by the court were as follows:

“ JSTo. 1. If the jury believe from the evidence that the conduct of the defendant was wanton or wilful, or showed that degree of indifference to the right of others that it may justly be characterized as recklessness, and had been the cause of the injury, then the court instructs the jury that the doctrine of contributory negligence shall not be considered by them.
Ho. 2. Court instructs the jury that the negligence of the defendant’s servants who are employed to run train in riming the same, is the negligence of the defendant, for which it is responsible.
Ho. 3.

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Bluebook (online)
28 W. Va. 732, 1886 W. Va. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/downey-v-c-o-railway-co-wva-1886.