Howell v. Southern Railway Co.

102 S.E. 856, 114 S.C. 21, 1920 S.C. LEXIS 84
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 12, 1920
Docket10396
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 102 S.E. 856 (Howell v. Southern Railway 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
Howell v. Southern Railway Co., 102 S.E. 856, 114 S.C. 21, 1920 S.C. LEXIS 84 (S.C. 1920).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was.delivered by

Mr. Justice Gage.

The plaintiff, who is called a yard conductor, sued the railway company and one of its employees, who is called yardmaster, for a tort to the person.

The jury found a verdict for the plaintiff against the railway company, and the company has appealed upon 22 exceptions.

*26 The event transpired at night, betwixt Royster and Columbia, and Royster is a “yard” some three miles out of Columbia.

The plaintiff on that night had charge of a train of cars made up of engine and tender, a flat car loaded with .lumber, and a “tool car;” and the engine was “pushing” these two cars from Royster towards the city.

The tool car is described as “part a flat car and part a box car;” the box car part of it as the train was then made up constituted the tail end of the train; and the plaintiff was mounted upon the top of that end, and upon the top edge of the box part which faced towards the engine, and he was facing the engine.

Along the length of the tool car there were laid two rails for a track, upon which to run on and off that car certain trucks which that car carried in .emergency, to put efficient trucks under such bad order cars as should need them along the line.

These trucks, and tools beside, were on the rail track within the box car section of the tool car; and a trapdoor hung betwixt the box car section and the flat car section of the tool car.

The controversy hangs about these trucks situate in the box car end of the tool car. The testimony of the plaintiff tended to show that the train had proceeded but a short distance from Royster towards Columbia when from some unexplained cause there was an impact of the cars; the plaintiff fell from the top of the box car section of the tool car, down onto the flat car section of it; the trucks rolled out of the box car section, broke through the trapdoor, ran along the rail track upon the flat car section on and over the prostrated body of the plaintiff.

The particular delict charged against the railway company was its neglect to have these trucks made so secure that they would not run away on the track provided for them.

*27 1, 2 The duty of the railway company thereabout is not seriously in issue, for its trainmaster testified to that point as follows: “A car is considered properly loaded when there are braces or blocks bolted down to keep those wheels from running up and down the track, and a car is not properly loaded until the chain of the block is bolted to the floor, and when they are not the wheels have a tendency to run up and down when the train is stopped. These wheels weigh about 1,300 pounds apiece. There were six or seven on this car.”

Beginning first here at the appellant’s first of the nine argued “points,” the testimony of the trainmaster makes inconsequential the competency of the testimony of Reynolds and Burt, witnesses for the plaintiff, who testified under objection about the insecureness of the trucks.

The complaint, however, did allege that there were loaded on the tool car “heavy trucks and wheels not properly or safely braced .or fastened,” and to that, the trainmáster, Burt, and Reynolds all testified with perfect competence.

3 2. The witness, Reynolds, who testified for the plaintiff, was one of the car repairers for the railway company. He testified that, on the Saturday before the accident on Monday, he was at work on the car, drilling holes and putting sufficient braces to keep the trucks from rolling back and forth on the tracks; that he asked his superior, a man named Sharpe, if he should work overtime and finish the job, and'Sharpe answered no; he at the same time told Sharpe this: “I told him I had- got them so if it was just switched any in the yard I didn’t think the trucks would roll through. I said, T put five by nines under the wheels,’ and I said that wouldn’t roll off, I didn’t think, if it was just switched in the yard. I said, T don’t think it will roll off that car if they switch that on that track.’, ”

When the railway company put up its witnesses Sharpe was not sworn to contradict Reynolds.

*28 The plaintiff in reply testified that Sharpe was at the instant in Court. The Court ruled that so much was competent, and we are of the same opinion. More than that, Gaffney, the trainmaster and a witness for the defendant, testified that Sharpe was “right here in Court.”

4 Under the same “point,” also, exception is taken to certain remarks said to have been made by Mr. Spigner in his address to the jury.

Appellant’s counsel said in oral argument at the bar that the remarks arraigned the railway company for putting a negro flagman to serve Howell on the night in question, when before that he had been served by a white flagman.

The case, however, does not show that Mr. Spigner made such remarks, and it does not show that the Court’s attention was called to such remarks; it shows only that Mr. Tompkins made objection to Mr. Spigner’s argument in these words: “Mr. Tompkins: I object to that line of argument. They tried to prove, when the man was on the stand, that we had taken away a flagman from him and given him another man, and he said he wasn’t a competent man, but I drew your Honor’s attentioii to the fact that there was no allegation of incompetent help, and you ruled that testimony out.”

And the case further shows that Mr. Tompkins not only did not object to the testimony about the change of - flagman, but that circumstance was adduced by him on the cross-examination of the plaintiff.

5 3. That exception is untenable which challenges the charge which the Court made on the subject of the assumption of risk, and which is directed to a refusal of the Court on like grounds to direct a verdict for the defendant.

The Court’s action is always referable to the testimony. Under the testimony there was no risk in sight to be assumed. The car was not a “bad order” one. Gaffney, *29 the trainmaster, so testified. He said: “There was no defect in that car; therefore, it would not be under the head of a car defect.”

The car had been in the shops at Columbia, and, as before stated, Reynolds was there “blocking the trucks” in it on Saturday. Before that job was completed, one Parker by wire from Spartanburg on May 6 ordered the car from Columbia to Union to put a pair of wheels under another disabled car at that place. On May 7 Parker advised Gaffney at Columbia by wire that he had been informed that the car “was not loaded,” and he returned it from up the road to Columbia on that day, to have necessary material placed on the car and to be forwarded to Union the next day to place trucks under the disabled car.

The car was so returned to Columbia, and to Royster, and Howell was carrying it from Royster into the city to have material placed on it, pursuant to Parker’s direction, when the accident occurred.

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Bluebook (online)
102 S.E. 856, 114 S.C. 21, 1920 S.C. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howell-v-southern-railway-co-sc-1920.