Keller v. Norfolk & Western Railway Co.

167 S.E. 448, 113 W. Va. 286, 1932 W. Va. LEXIS 301
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 6, 1932
Docket7095
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 167 S.E. 448 (Keller v. Norfolk & Western 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
Keller v. Norfolk & Western Railway Co., 167 S.E. 448, 113 W. Va. 286, 1932 W. Va. LEXIS 301 (W. Va. 1932).

Opinion

HATCHER, PRESIDENT :

A verdict awarding the plaintiff damages for personal injuries was set aside by the trial court and the plaintiff obtained a writ of error.

This is the second time this case has been before us. For convenience, the facts and the ruling on the first trial as contained in Keller v. N. & W. R. Co., 109 W. Va. 522, 156 S. E. 50, follow:

“About eight o’clock on the morning of April 16, 1929, H. C. Keller and his three sons, Clay, Charles and Jess, aged eighteen, thirteen and ten years, respectively, started across a private railroad crossing in a Ford roadster. The car was struck from the right by a regular passenger train of defendant (running on time) causing the death of Keller and injuries to Jess. Clay was on the left of the seat, driving the car; the father was on the right, and the little boys were between them. Clay testified that he looked for and saw no train before going on the crossing; that in watching for a train he allowed the car to get a little off the crossing; that the rear wheels ivere checked by the second rail, stalling the engine and leaving the rear part of the car (only) on the track; that he then looked again and saw no train, but did not look any more; that while trying *288 to start his engine, the car was struck by the train Without any warning of its approach until within a few feet; that the car stalled about one and one-half minutes before the collision; and that he did not know whether his father looked for the train or not. The testimony of Charles and Jess is substantially the same as that of .Clay. A number of witnesses for plaintiff say they heard no train signals closer than a mile or so to the crossing until they heard distress signals just before the collision. Evidence for plaintiff fix the distance at which the crossing could be seen from the track at from about nine hundred to sixteen hundred feet.
“The version of the trainmen is that the fireman and engineer could see the crossing at distances of about 900 and 500 feet respectively; that the whistle was blown as a crossing warning in the bend about one-half mile from the crossing; that at a distance of .some eight or nine hundred feet the fireman noticed the car approaching the crossing and commenced ringing the bell; that when he saw the car was not stopping, he blew the whistle; that the engineer was watching the track and did not see the car until it ‘ was right at the crossing; that he immediately threw on the emergency brake and applied the sand, which was all he could do as the train was ‘drifting’ at the time; and that the ear was entirely upon the crossing when it was struck. C. J. Jeter, a witness for the plaintiffs, supports the engineer as to the whistle being blown in the bend above the crossing. The testimony of the trainmen as to the position of the roadster at the moment of collision is confirmed by the following undisputed and unquestioned evidence, (a) The ground was scraped for a distance on the outer side of each rail, (b) There is an indentation about six inches deep in the right door (sheet steel) of the car, which was received in the collision and which corresponds exactly to the dimensions of the knuckle of a steel coupling on the pilot beam of the engine. (The beam extends across the front of the engine about thirty inches above the rail, and the coupling is in the exact center of the beam.) (c) Two iron steps, one on each side of the pilot beam, were ‘bent in’.
“TIad the car been at the place located by plaintiffs when it was struck, the ground would have been scraped on both sides of the second rail only; the indentation of the coupling knuckle would have *289 appeared somewhere on the rear of the car, if at all, and only one step would have been bent in. The proven physical facts demonstrate that plaintiffs’ witnesses are confused as to the position of the car at the moment of collision; and that instead of merely the rear of the ear being on the track, the entire car was on it, the center of the car being about the the center of the track. The plaintiffs have no explanation whatever of why the car was squarely on the track when it was struck. Testimony for defendant, which is also undisputed, shows that when sufficient power had been exerted to propel a car like the roadster up on the crossing, the acquired momentum of the car alone would roll it across and free of the track. So the theory that the roadster had been stalled at the actual place of collision is hardly tenable. It is incumbent on the plaintiffs to show just how and why the entire car happened to be on the crossing when struck. Until they show that, we have no way of determining just what prior duty the trainmen owed them, or whether that duty was breached. Verdicts based on oral evidence, controverted by established physical facts, as in these cases, cannot stand. Owen v. Appalachian Power Co., 78 W. Va. 596, 609, 610, 89 S. E. 262; Waller v. Ry. Co., 108 W. Va. 576, 152 S. E. 13; 46 C. J., p. 183, sec. 138.”

In an able discussion of the doctrine of the last clear chance by Robert T. Donley, Esq., in the June, 1931, issue of the West Virginia Law Quarterly, 362, 372, the following question was asked in relation to our holding in the former opinion: “Admit that those facts show that the car was entirely on the crossing, how does that nullify the testimony of the plaintiff that it remained there for one and one-half minutes before the train struck it?” The brief of plaintiff on the instant writ quotes that question and we are glad of opportunity to answer it. .It was not the fact that the roadster was entirely on the crossing, alone, which nullified plaintiff’s evidence that it had been stalled for one and one-half minutes, but the demonstration that when in that position momentum and gravity would have caused the roadster to roll off the crossing unless voluntarily restrained.

Upon the second trial only one witness, Clay Keller, attempted to locate the position of the roadster at the moment *290 of collision and to state the duration it had been in that position. His testimony in chief is that he inadvertently allowed the “front wheel” (presumably the right wheel) of the roadster to go over the first rail about a foot to the right of the travelled way of the crossing; that the front wheels of the car may have gone some two feet beyond the first rail, or maybe not, but he does not believe that they crossed the second rail; that something — he does not know what — against his wheels then stalled the car, and that he guessed he was stalled about “a minute or a half minute”. (As the wheel base of the roadster was eight feet and seven and one-half inches, and the gauge between the rails is four feet, eight and one-half inches, it will be noted that this location placed the rear wheels some four feet or more from the first rail, and some eight feet or more from the second rail.) On cross-examination, his testimony upon the first trial of this case, as well as upon the trial of its companion case, Lena Keller, Adm’rx. v. N. & W. Ry. Co., was read to him wherein he had repeatedly said that the rear wheels of the Keller automobile bounced over the first rail and stopped in the center of the track.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
167 S.E. 448, 113 W. Va. 286, 1932 W. Va. LEXIS 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keller-v-norfolk-western-railway-co-wva-1932.