Killmyer v. Wheeling Traction Co.

77 S.E. 908, 72 W. Va. 148, 1913 W. Va. LEXIS 23
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 11, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 77 S.E. 908 (Killmyer v. Wheeling Traction 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
Killmyer v. Wheeling Traction Co., 77 S.E. 908, 72 W. Va. 148, 1913 W. Va. LEXIS 23 (W. Va. 1913).

Opinion

LyNoi-i, Judge :

By writ of error defendant seeks review and reversal of a judgment against it in this case. The action is for recovery of damages for an injury to plaintiff.

While there is conflict in the evidence in some respects later noticed, it sufficiently appears that plaintiff, about midnight on the day of the injury, was a passenger on defendant’s traction lines, and as such entitled to transportation from Moundsville to Wheeling, he having paid the necessary fare for the trip. On the arrival of the car at Bogg’s run, an intermediate point, those in charge thereof, finding the tracks submerged by reason of a freshet, directed plaintiff and other passengers to alight and to proceed on foot by a way designated by the employes to another of defendant’s cars then, or soon to arrive, at a point on its lines beyond the obstruction, which would carry them to their destination, without further charge. Finding the way so [150]*150designated also obstructed, they returned to the first car, when, as plaintiff seeks to prove and defendant to deny, the employes directed them to follow another course likewise designated in order to reach the second car, and that in following the same the plaintiff fell from a high wall and received the injury for which he seeks recovery. There is no denial that the employes directed the course first designated and abandoned. The defendant does deny, and to some extent supports the denial'by the testimony of its employes,' that any directions were given by the latter as to any course, and especially as to the one actually followed. It introduced evidence tending to prove that the course followed was so inherently and obviously dangerous that prudent men having due regard for personal safety would not •follow it, even if directed so to do; that one other course was open and free from obstruction, in following which the injury would not have occurred. It also denies that plaintiff was a passenger, thus requiring its care for his safety while passing on foot between its cars. Substantially, though in brief, this statement fairly presents the material issues to which the proof in the record is directed, and upon a consideration of which the jury based its finding.

In view' of the authorities examined, including those cited by counsel'and others, the conclusion is that plaintiff was and remained a passenger, entitled to a high degree of care for his safety, from the time of his entry on defendant’s car at Mounds-ville to his discharge therefrom in the city of Wheeling. Why not? He paid and it received the requisite fare. It accepted him as a passenger, and thereby engaged to carry him to his destination. In the meantime it also assumed that high degree of care for his personal safety imposed by law upon a common carrier. The defendant does not deny the relation of passenger and carrier during the time plaintiff was within its cars, or his right to transportation thereon before and after the obstruction. The relation is denied only during the time intervening and necessary for passage from one car to the other. This proposition does not find support in any authority cited or found upon examining this case. If a passenger on each car under the same and not a new contract, he was a passenger in the interval. The relation of carrier and passenger, with its [151]*151attendant duties and obligation, is not intermittent. It continues until completed, unless broken by some act of the passenger indicative of abandonment, or some conduct on his part justifying the carrier in terminating the relation. “Where the relation of carrier and passenger is once established, it continues until terminated by the voluntary act of the passenger, or the act of the carrier, under circumstances justifying its termination, and extends to the arrival of the passenger at his destination; and a temporary departure from the train for some good or reasonable cause, without the intent to abandon the transportation, will not end the relation.” 6 Cyc. 541.

Where a passenger had a ticket entitling him to carriage beyond a station, at which in changing trains it was necessary to cross intervening tracks of the carrier, and in doing so he was injured, it was held that while “in transit from one train to the other he continued to be a passenger and entitled to the protection that the highest degree of care on the part of the defendant could afford under the circumstances.” Railroad Co. v. Hauer, 60 Md. 449. The relation of ’carrier and passenger does not cease, although actual transit is interrupted by a wreck, and plaintiff in order to obtain a nearer view thereof voluntarily leaves the temporary station to which he has been transferred to await the arrival of another train. Conroy v. Railroad Co., 196 Wis. 244. True, in the case cited recovery was denied, not because the relation had ceased, but because the defendant did nothing expressly or by implication to invite, entice or allure plaintiff to the place of injury. On the contrary, he voluntarily and unnecessarily exposed himself to a place where the danger was apparent and impending. A stockman on a freight train, with the consent of the railroad company, in charge of his stock, does not cease to be a passenger while making a necessary change from one caboose to another at the end of a division. Railroad Co. v. Winters, 175 Ill. 293. Nor does one lose the character of passenger if from motives of pleasure, curiosity or business he temporarily alights from the train at a regular station, intending to resume his journey thereon. Layne v. Railroad Co., 66 W. Va. 607; Parsons v. Railroad Co., 113 N. Y. 450; Dwinelle v. Railroad Co., 120 N. Y. 117; Railway Co. v. Coggins, 88 Fed. 455.

[152]*152The eases cited assert the principles stated, and, in addition thereto, hold that the carrier’s duty requires it, during the continuance of the relation, to use that degree of diligence for the safety of its passengers proportionate to the danger to be avoided, and that its failure to do so is negligence. The authorities and the facts of this case abundantly establish the continuity of the relation of carrier and passenger from the time plaintiff entered defendant’s car at Moundsville to his departure therefrom in Wheeling, and its liability to him for injury received during the existence of that relation, unless his negligence was the proximate cause of the injury.

To defeat plaintiff’s recovery, defendant assumes the burden of proving that the injury occurred because of negligence attributable to him without which the injury would not have occurred. . This it undertook to do by showing, first, that it gave no instructions for reaching the second car, and, second, that if such instructions were given plaintiff disobeyed them and pursued a way other than the one usually followed by pedestrains. The evidence relating to directions by defendant, while not convincing beyond doubt, is nevertheless sufficiently clear to sustain the jury’s finding in that respect. If instructions were in fact so given, the defendant can not reasonably complain if plaintiff undertook to follow them. The authorities hold, and reason approves the proposition, that a passenger may act upon the direction or invitation of trainmen in charge representing the carrier, unless it is apparent that to do so would imperil his safety.

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Bluebook (online)
77 S.E. 908, 72 W. Va. 148, 1913 W. Va. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/killmyer-v-wheeling-traction-co-wva-1913.