Jones v. Charleston & Western Carolina Ry. Co.

39 S.E. 758, 61 S.C. 556, 1901 S.C. LEXIS 182
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 23, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 39 S.E. 758 (Jones v. Charleston & Western Carolina 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
Jones v. Charleston & Western Carolina Ry. Co., 39 S.E. 758, 61 S.C. 556, 1901 S.C. LEXIS 182 (S.C. 1901).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was de-

livered by

Mr. Justice Jones.

This is an action for damages for personal injury resulting in the death of plaintiff’s intestate, through defendant’s alleged negligence in operating its train of cars at Anderson, S. C., and the appeal comes up from a judgment on verdict in favor of the plaintiff.

1 The first, second and third exceptions relate to the admissibility of certain testimony. Over the objection of defendant, witnesses were allowed to testify that the railroad track of the defendant company from the depot station to the Orr Cotton Mills, on which plaintiff’s intestate was injured,' was used by persons without objection on the part of the defendant. Appellant, in the first exception, alleges that this was error, because the track was not a traveled way where said intestate had a right to be. Conceding that the evidence was wholly insufficient to establish that the track at the place of the injury was a traveled place, where the public had a legal right to travel, the testimony was admissible for what it was worth on the issue raised in the pleadings, whether persons were accustomed to use the track as a walkway with the consent or acquiescence of the defendant, and for the purpose'of showing the circumstances which called for the exercise of car'e on the part of the defendant.

The second exception was not pressed and need not be noticed.

The third exception assigns error in admitting in evidence an ordinance of the city of Anderson, making it unlawful for any moving’engine or train of cars to cross airy street of the city at a rate of speed faster than four miles an hour, and making it the duty of the persons in control to ring a bell for at least fifty yards immediately before reaching such crossing, when it appeared that the injury did not occur at a *559 crossing. There does not appear in the “Case” any basis for this exception. The ordinance was set out in the pleading, and when proof was being offered, defendant’s counsel said, “we admit the ordinance as set out in the pleading.” It does appear that a motion was attempted to be made to strike out the ordinance from the evidence .after the refusal of the motion for nonsuit, and that it was agreed by counsel that this motion should be taken up after the close of the testimony; but we do not find that such motion was ever taken up or ever ruled upon by the Circuit Court.

2- The fourth exception alleges error in the refusal of the motion for nonsuit, which motion was based on the ground that the evidence showed that the plaintiff’s intestate was a trespasser when injured, and there was no evidence of gross or wilful misconduct of the defendant in the management of its train. The general rule undoubtedly is .that a railro'ad company owes no duty to a bald trespasser on its track except not to do him any wanton or wilful injury. Smalley v. Southern Ry. Co., 57 S. C., 243, and authorities therein cited. Ordinarily, the mere failure to keep a lookout for adult trespassers that may be on the track is not evidence of negligence to the trespasser, because negligence involves a breach o'f duty to the injured person, and the railroad company owes no such duty to .the adult trespasser. It is the trespasser’s duty to look out for himself, and to give the railroad company a clear track by getting out of the way. If, however, the servants of the railroad company should discover a trespasser upon the track and should then fail to use ordinary care under the circumstances to avoid running him down, this would be evidence from which a jury might infer that the injury was the result not of mere inadvertence but of a conscious failure to observe due care or of wantonness or wilfulness. In this case, however, the complaint alleged that the track where the injury occurred “traverses a populous part of the city of Anderson, and is much frequented by people passing to and fro along said railway, which fact was well known to the *560 defendant and its agents, servants and employees,” and there was some 'evidence tending to establish such allegations which made it proper to submit the case to the jury. If such allegations be true, then the circumstances were such as to call for a higher degree of care to avoid injury than if plaintiff were a bald trespasser. Even though the use of the track by the public as a walkway was not for such length of time nor of such character as to give a legal right to so use the track, and even though the evidence fell short of showing any positive consent of such use by the company, yet if there was evidence tending to show knowledge of an acquiescence in such use without protest, such evidence would tend to show that the railroad company had much reason to expect the presence of persons upon the track, who were there not as bald trespassers, but using it with, the knowledge and. acquiescence of the company. Under such circumstances it would be the duty of the railroad company to keep a reasonable lookout, or to give warning of the approach of the train, or generally to observe ordinary care under the circumstances to avoid injury. The evidence tended to show that on December 25th, 1899, the plaintiff’s intestate, with her husband and two children, were passengers on defendant’s train from Starr to Anderson. That the plaintiff with his family resided at the Orr Cotton Mills, which is something over a mile south, from the station at Anderson, and situate near the defendant’s track. That before the train reached the Orr Cotton Mills, the plaintiff or her husband requested the conductor to put them off at the mill, but as it was against his orders, the conductor declined to do so. The train reached the station at Anderson after dark. On arrival the plaintiff, with her husband and two children and two other persons, left the train and started back down the track to the Orr Cotton Mills. As stated, there was evidence tending to show that the track was constantly used by the public with the knowledge of the defendant company. There was a way by streets from the station to the cotton mills, but the route down the track was consid *561 erably nearer. The night was dark and cold, and the wind was blowing hard. Some ten minutes after arrival the train, as usual, was being backed down the track towards the Orr Cotton Mills, for the purpose of shifting, it being customary in shifting for the train to be backed about six car lengths beyond a trestle about 330 yards south of West Market street, near which is the station. This trestle is fifty-six yards below Reed street and is twenty-four yards long. The injury occurred at the south end of this trestle. James R. Jones, the husband, testified that at the time o'f the accident, his wife was on the trestle, leading her little boy and holding a gun in the other hand. That he was holding the baby in his arms, and while upon the trestle looked around and saw the train about thirty or forty feet away; that he called to his wife that the train was coming and to get off the trestle; that he jumped off the trestle with the baby, and that the train ran over his wife and. killed her, and that the little boy was found hanging between the ties of the trestle uninjured, and that the others of the party escaped by jumping off the trestle. The evidence was that the speed of the train was from five to six or from eight to ten miles an hour.

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Bluebook (online)
39 S.E. 758, 61 S.C. 556, 1901 S.C. LEXIS 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-charleston-western-carolina-ry-co-sc-1901.