Ettison v. Southern Ry. Co.

96 S.E. 680, 110 S.C. 522, 1918 S.C. LEXIS 76
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedAugust 15, 1918
Docket10069
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 96 S.E. 680 (Ettison v. Southern Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ettison v. Southern Ry. Co., 96 S.E. 680, 110 S.C. 522, 1918 S.C. LEXIS 76 (S.C. 1918).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Hydrick.

Defendant appeals from judgment for plaintiff for damages for personal injury—the loss of plaintiff’s right arm— which the jury found was caused by defendant’s negligence. At the time of his injury, plaintiff was employed by defendant as a laborer in'extending a sidetrack at or near Bridge-water, N. C. The action was brought under the statutes of North Carolina, which plaintiff set out in his complaint, and alleged that they governed the case and his right to recover damages for the injury. Defendant denied generally the allegations of the complaint, and set up the defenses-of contributory negligence and assumption of risk, and also invoked the benefit of the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (Act April 22, 1908, c. 149, 35 Stat. 65 [U. S. Comp. St. 1916, secs. 8657-8665]), alleging that, at the time of the injury, plaintiff and defendant were engaged in interstate commerce.

Plaintiff alleged that the gang of laborers with which he worked was composed of about 25 men, working under a foreman; that a work train was used to carry materials and the laborers and their tools and implements to and from the camp, or place where the shanty cars in which they slept at night were sidetracked; that, when they quit work for the day, the train was run slowly along the track toward the camp, and the laborers were told to get on it while it was so moving to prevent the necessity of making frequent stops for them to get on, as they were generally at different points along the track; that this method of work was dangerous, but that he was young and inexperienced and did not understand or appreciate the danger of attempting to get on moving trains, and, though defendant knew it, he had never been *525 warned of the danger; that, about 6 o’clock in the afternoon. of May 9, 1917, after they had quit work for the day, the work train came along as usual, moving about two or three miles an hour, and, according to the custom and the instructions previously given him—though no one told him to do so on that particular occasion—he attempted to get on the train to ride to the camp, which was about a quarter of a mile from the place where they had been at work, and, after he had caught the grabiron on the side of the caboose, and was on the second step of the car, it was given a sudden and violent jerk by the application of the brakes, and he was thrown off and fell under the car, and the wheel ran over and crushed his right arm between the elbow and shoulder so that it had to be amputated. He charged defendant with negligence in adopting a dangerous method of work, in failing to stop the train for him to get on, in causing it to give a sudden and violent jerk, when it was known, or should have been known, that he and the other workmen would probably be attempting to get on it, and in failing to warn him of the danger. Plaintiff offered no other than his own testimony, which tended to prove the allegations of his complaint.

The testimony of defendant’s witnesses tended to refute plaintiff’s testimony in some of the material points, and it tended to prove that plaintiff had told the foreman that, he was 22 years old (plaintiff testified that he was about 16) * that he was bad about catching and swinging onto passing trains, and had been frequently warned by the foreman and others of the danger of doing so; that, on the day of the accident, they were at work about 100 yards from the camp, and there was, therefore, no reason for plaintiff 'to get on the train to ride that distance to the camp; and that he did so for his own pleasure and convenience. The foreman testified that the workmen were not allowed to get on the train while it was in motion, but that it was always stopped on signal from him and held until they could get on; that the *526 .train that came in that afternoon had been at work on a different part of the railroad, and plaintiff’s gang had not used that train for more than a week, but it was going into the same camp; that there was no sudden jerk of the car, but that plaintiff fell off because his foot slipped; and that the sidetrack upon which plaintiff had been working had been used from time to time, and was intended to be used, for the passage of trains and cars used in interstate commerce.

At the close of plaintiff’s testimony, defendant moved for a nonsuit, on the ground that there was no evidence of negligence, and that the injury was caused by plaintiff’s own negligence, or his contributory negligence. The motion was refused; and, at the close of all the testimony, defendant moved for a directed verdict on the following grounds:

“(1) All the evidence shows that plaintiff was injured by his own negligence in getting on a car and falling off of same.
“(2) The great preponderance of the evidence shows that plaintiff was injured by his own negligence by getting on and falling off.
“(3) As the uncontradicted testimony shows that both defendant and plaintiff were engaged in interstate commerce at the time -of the injury, and hence' plaintiff could not recover in this action as it is brought under the laws of the State of North Carolina. If he wasn’t going back to the shanty'cars on that train, he was a trespasser and not entitled to recover. There is no wilfulness alleged, and a trespasser would not be entitled to recover, damages unless his injury was the result'of wilfulness.”

The motion was refused, and defendant then practically •renewed it in requests to charge which were also refused.

The Court, being of the opinion that the testimony made an issue of fact as to whether the parties were engaged in interstate commerce at the time of the injury, and, therefore, as to whether the case was governed by the State o*r the Fed *527 eral law, instructed the jury as to both, and pointed out the difference between them, and told them 'to apply the State law, if they found from the evidence that plaintiff was not engaged in interstate commerce, but that, if they found that he was engaged in interstate commerce, then they must apply the Federal law, as declared, and render a verdict accordingly. As to how they should determine that issue of fact, the jury was instructed as follows:

“Now, you will want to know the rule of law by which you are to find out how this plaintiff was employed at the time; that is, the rule of law by which you will have to find out whether or not he was engaged in interstate commerce. If, at the time he was injured, he was doing something essential to the carrying on of the work for which he was engaged, and that work was connected with railroad tracks over which both interstate and intrastate trains ran indiscriminately, or if he was doing some minor task that was at all connected with that kind of work, he would be engaged in interstate commerce. If the act that he was doing at the time he was injured was a necessary incident of his day’s work and partook of the character of that work as a whole, and that work was connected with interstate commerce, under the principle that I have just given you, then he would be engaged in interstate commerce; otherwise he would -not be.”

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Related

Towns v. Monongahela Railway Co.
144 S.E. 289 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 S.E. 680, 110 S.C. 522, 1918 S.C. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ettison-v-southern-ry-co-sc-1918.