Gunn v. Ohio River R'd

14 S.E. 465, 36 W. Va. 165, 1892 W. Va. LEXIS 61
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 12, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 14 S.E. 465 (Gunn v. Ohio River R'd) 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
Gunn v. Ohio River R'd, 14 S.E. 465, 36 W. Va. 165, 1892 W. Va. LEXIS 61 (W. Va. 1892).

Opinion

Holt, J:

On the 26th day of June, 1890, in the morning, between eight and nine o’clock, in Mason county, three miles below Point Pleasant, on the track of the Ohio River Railroad Company, two little boys, the one named Henry C. Mays, the other named Luela Mays, were accidentally killed by the up-bound passenger train on defendant’s railroad. I say “accidentally” in the beginning, once for all; for to [168]*168suppose that fireman, engineer or any one in conduct of the train did so knowingly or willfully, in the sense of purposely, is, according to the evidence, absurd and entirely out of the case. It was an accident- — -nothing more.

Of those two little brothers, Henry, the only one whose death is before the court in this case, was between four and five years old. Luela was slightly larger, and presumptively a year or more older, but his age does not otherwise appear, nor is his death a matter of concern in this case, except so far as the evidence connects the two, and the killing of the one throws light upon the circumstances attending the killing of the other.

This suit was brought in August, 1890, in the Circuit Court of Mason county, by W. E. Gunu, administrator of the child, Henry C. Mays, deceased, against the OhioEiver Eailroad Company, for ten thousand dollars damages for the alleged negligence of the defendant in causing the death of the child Henry. The case wras matured for hearing. Defendant appeared and pleaded not guilty. A jury was impanelled but, failing to agree, .were discharged from rendering a verdict.

On the 11th of May, 1891, the case was again put on trial, and, after plaintift had introduced all his evidence, on motion of defendant the same was excluded; and the jury, without being permitted to consider any evidence on plaintiff's behalf — none was offered by defendant — rendered a verdict of not guilty. The plaintiff mov.ed for a new trial. The court refused it. Plaintiff- excepted. The court rendered judgment, and the record is now here for review on writ of error allowed plaintiff.

Eleven witnesses were examined by plaintiff. All were near, one of them a passenger on the train, but no one knew anything about the immediate circumstances or cause of the killing, except the fireman on the train, who saw it all, but too late, as it turned out, to prevent it. I here give his testimony, as certified and sent up by the court below:

“"Was fireman on the train by which the accident occurred. Saw the children at the time they were hit. Think it was the cylinder struck them. When they were struck they rolled off down into the little culvert or ditch.”

[169]*169Upon cross-examination the witness testified as follows : “As soon as witness saw the children the bell was rung and the whistle sounded — the alarm given by witness. To avoid the accident, the air was put on and the engine reversed, and witness did everything he could to stop the train, and everything was done that could be done.”

Upon redirect examination said witness further testified : “That witness saw some object on the track. That he did not know what it was. When he was about fifty or seventy yards below where the children were struck, witness had just been putting coal in the fire, and had gone up on his seat-box. Could have seen an object on the road there some three or four or five hundred yards. Could not discern what the object was that .far, if as small as decedent. As soon as witness discovered the danger the air was put on and the engine reversed. Witness did not leave anything undone that could be done to avoid the accident, and could not have prevented it after he saw the children. Witness had been shoveling coal, and had just got upon his seat when he saw the children. It was a clear day. Witness did not know whether the engineer in charge of the train was on the lookout or not. He was sitting there. It was his business to look out. It is the duty of the engineer or fireman to look ahead. It is the duty of the fireman to look on one side and the engineer on the other. The children were sitting on the witness’s side of the engine. They were sitting right astraddle of the guard-rail. Think cylinder struck larger boy, and the step on witness’ side of engine struck smaller boy. They were sitting on left side, facing north. Witness supposed train was running twenty five or thirty miles an hour, and it would take something like a hundred yards or over to stop. Train ran about the length of itself past the children before it was stopped, and suppose it was something like a hundred yards after witness saw children until train was stopped.”

The accident took place on a short trestle ten or twelve feet long and four and a half feet high above the bottom of the ditch or small stream which it spanned. It supported about ten cross-ties, eight inches broad, eight and a half feet long, with a space of about six inches between the ties. At [170]*170the trestle there was a cattle-guard, a fence inclosiug the railroad from there going up, but no such fence going down. A public road here ran along the railroad some fifty feet away to the right, going up and going down, to á public crossing four hundred yards below the trestle.

Four hundred yards below the crossing the up-bound train, having turned a curve, had a straight, level stretch, without cuts, with the view wholly unobstructed from there to the trestle. The morning was bright and clear, and the two little hoys, if then upon the trestle, could have been seen, and might have been seen, by those whose duty it was, if it was the duty of any one, to keep a lookout up the track, for a distance of six hundred yards — say two hundred yards — below the public crossing; and at that distance they could not only be seen as persons on the track, hut could be recognized as two small children, according to the testimony of two of the witnesses.

The father and mother lived four hundred yards east of the trestle, and kept one cow, which ran at large, and they were in the habit of sending these two children to drive the cow to the public road at the trestle, and turn her up the road at that point, with directions not to go on the railroad, but to come back home; and they were thus sent by their mother to drive the cow to the road on the morning in question, with instructions to come hack at once.

They had once before been seen herding the cow near the trestle, and at one time playing on the abutment of the trestle, and the mother had been cautioned on that morning, and before, to keep these two little boys away from the railroad.

The passenger train, engine, tender and two coaches, about one hundred and fifty feet long, was running at the speed of twenty five or thirty miles an hour, twelve to four teen yards a second, and it could not be stopped in less than one hundred yards.

The evidence of the fireman, as certified, leaves it in some doubt whether or not he saw the children as objects on the track before he saw and recognized them as children. Just before he saw them close at hand he had been shovelling coal. How far hack he commenced, or how long he was at [171]*171it, he does not tell us; but he does tell us that at a distance of fifty or seventy yards, having just gotten upon his seat, he saw the children. Then, as he says, the bell was rung, the whistle sounded, the air was put on the brakes, the engine reversed, and everything done that could be done in that way to save the children. A passenger on the train, and two other witnesses near by, heard no danger signal sounded.

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Bluebook (online)
14 S.E. 465, 36 W. Va. 165, 1892 W. Va. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gunn-v-ohio-river-rd-wva-1892.