Hanger Bros. v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co.

73 S.E. 713, 70 W. Va. 212, 1912 W. Va. LEXIS 6
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 23, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 73 S.E. 713 (Hanger Bros. v. Chesapeake & Ohio 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
Hanger Bros. v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co., 73 S.E. 713, 70 W. Va. 212, 1912 W. Va. LEXIS 6 (W. Va. 1912).

Opinion

MilleR, Judge:

Plaintiffs seek reversal of the judgment below, on appeal from the judgment of a justice, setting aside the verdict of the jury in their favor, for one hundred and seventy-five dollars, and awarding defendant a new trial.

The action begun before a justice was for damages for alleged negligence of defendant in killing plaintiffs’ horse.

One of the questions presented in the court below, on the evidence, and by instructions to the jury proposed’by defendant, and in the petition filed in this Court, is whether the alleged negligence, if any, in killing the liorse was that of the defendant or of the White Oak Railway Company, operating the engine and cars that killed the horse.

The evidence shows that the railway track where the killing occurred, the engine, and at least one of the cars belonged to the defendant company, and that the movement of the train over said track ivas controlled by the train dispatcher of defendant company at Hinton. There is evidence that after the horse was killed servants of the defendant company took charge of its carcass and buried it, and that when other animals had been killed on the same branch the defendant settled the damages. The point does not seem to be relied on in argument here and we think we may properly regard it as having been abandoned.

[214]*214. The main question presented is, whether it is negligence per se for a railroad company in the night time to> run an engine backwards over its main track, as was done in this ease, without a proper headlight on the tender sufficient to enable the engine-men,. in the exercise of reasonable and ordinary care, to see ahead a reasonable distance and to avoid doing injury to dumb animals astray upon the track? It is conceded that the horse was not killed at a public crossing, and that it was a trespasser on the defendant’s right of way, and that defendant owed it no duty except to observe ordinary care to not wantonly and willfully run it down and kill it. That this measure- of duty is' imposed by law upon a railway company with respect to stock astray upon its private right of way is fully established by prior decisions of this Court. Layne v. Ohio River R. Co. 35 W. Va. 439, and the cases cited and reviewed therein.

This and other cases, with no less exactness, we think, require of a railroad company and its servants operating its trains, that they use like ordinary care in providing the means of discovering such stock on its track. Does this rule require of a railroad company operating trains at night, to equip its engines or cars with reasonably sufficient headlights and other appliances necessary to avoid doing injury to trespassing animals? It would clearly be negligence giving a passenger injured thereby right of action. But will it give right of action to- the owner of animals killed by such negligence? By defendant’s instruction number 3, given, the court below, in substance, told the jury that the railway company was not negligent in not having a headlight on the engine which ran over and killed plaintiffs’ horse, unless the killing took place at a public crossing. As it was not killed at a public crossing the practical effect of the instruction, therefore, was to tell the jury that defendant was not negligent, and not liable. The jury evidently did not regard the instruction, for they found a verdict for plaintiffs notwithstanding the instruction.

In discussing .the rule requiring of a railway company ordinary care and precaution to discover animals on its track and right of way, 3 Elliott on Bailroads, section 1205, supported by numerous decisions cited, says: “It is held to be the duty of the company to use care to equip its locomotives with such head[215]*215lights as would render a lookout effective.” And in section 1206 this writer says: “The company is bound to use ordinary care to prevent injuries to animals and where ordinary care requires the use of signals the company may be guilty of negligence in omitting them although they are not required by statute.” In Layne v. Railroad Co., supra, it is also held that the servants of a railway company are “equally bound to adopt the ordinary precaution to discover danger as to avoid its consequences after it becomes knówn.” Our case of Kirk v. N. & W. R. Co., 41 W. Va. 722, says: “If the servants of a railroad company in charge of a train, by exercise of ordinary care, can see and save domestic animals which have wandered on the railroad, it is their duty to do so; but this duty must be exercised consistently with the paramount duties they owe to the passengers on the train under their charge.” What rule of reason or policy then could excuse a railway company, operating trains at night, from equipping its engines with proper headlights to aid its servants in the performance of their duty? If it is the duty of its servants by the exercise of ordinary care, to see and endeavor to save such animals, astray upon its track, there must certainly be a corresponding duty on the part of a railway company to use ordinary care in providing,its trains with sufficient headlights in aid thereof. The proposition seems so fundamental and self evident as not to require further elaboration. It is sustained not only by the authorities already referred to, but by 33 Cye. 1218, and cases cited in note 57.

As opposed to this rule defendant’s counsel cite and rely on Melton v. Railroad Co., 64 W. Va. 168, point 2 of the syllabus, saying: “Signals or lights or watchmen are not required on a backing train elsewhere than at public crossings to warn trespassers using the track for their own convenience as a foot path.” Does this rule, applicable to persons using the track, affirmed in this and in the prior decisions cited, apply also to dumb animals ? In Melton v. Railroad Co., the fact is emphasized that it was not claimed that the trainmen saw or could have seen Myers, the deceased, before hitting him with the backing engine. In Huff v. C. & O. Ry. Co., 48 W. Va. 45, the same rule was applied to a trespasser in the yards of the defendant company. It is’there held that unless guilty of wanton [216]*216or gross negligence a railroad company can not be held liable in damages to persons so trespassing. In the present case the horse was not injured by a backing engine and tender, in the yards of the defendant, but outside, on the main track, and by an engine being operated in that way, in hauling a regular passenger train, and it was a dumb animal, not a live sentient person, of mature years, that was killed. Our decisions hold, with respect to dumb animals, as to helpless, insane or infant persons, that a railroad company owes a duty to- the owner to keep a careful lookout ahead to discover them upon the track and to use ordinary care to avoid injuring them. Besides the cases already cited, see cases cited in 11 Cyc. Dig. Va. & W. Va. Reports, pp. 586-599.

With respect to persons of mature years, possessed of all their faculties, a railroad company and its trainmen have the right to assume unless circumstances indicate the contrary, that they will hear the approaching train and get out of the way in time to avoid injury. Not so with respect to dumb animals and helpless persons. And as we have already said this duty must also include the corresponding duty to provide and keep in order sufficient headlights.

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Bluebook (online)
73 S.E. 713, 70 W. Va. 212, 1912 W. Va. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanger-bros-v-chesapeake-ohio-railway-co-wva-1912.