Kirkland v. Augusta-Aiken Ry. & Electric Corp.

81 S.E. 306, 97 S.C. 61, 1914 S.C. LEXIS 151
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 13, 1914
Docket8786
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 81 S.E. 306 (Kirkland v. Augusta-Aiken Ry. & Electric Corp.) 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
Kirkland v. Augusta-Aiken Ry. & Electric Corp., 81 S.E. 306, 97 S.C. 61, 1914 S.C. LEXIS 151 (S.C. 1914).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court states the facts and was delivered by

Mr. Justice Fraser.

This is an action for damages for the negligent and wilful and wanton killing of plaintiff’s intestate, B. D. Kirkland. The undisputed evidence shows that the deceased was under the influence of liquor in Aiken. That a policeman started to arrest him, but one of his friends promised to take charge of him and get him off on the defendant’s car for his home in Madison, a village community near Graniteville, in Aiken county, in this State. That the deceased left the car at the Lutheran Crossing, one of the stops in Graniteville, and that the Lutheran Crossing was the proper place for the' deceased to leave the car. The deceased alighted, as such passengers were accustomed to alight, on the opposite side of the car from his home, and started for his home by crossing the track and walking up the track on a path that was usually used by people living in that section for travel in going from one side of the Lutheran Crossing to another, and also by passengers taking the cars and leaving the cars for their homes. That the Lutheran Crossing- was a flag station, but one of the regular stations, as most of defendant stations were flag stations. That the Lutheran Crossing was a public highway. That near the crossing, within a few feet, but outside of the highway, there was a ditch or “gully” that ran up near the crossties, and the path passed between the head of the “gully” and the crossties of the defendant’s road. A few minutes after the car from which the deceased had alighted passed on, another car of the defendant came in the opposite direction and struck the deceased and killed him. Two boys, who were attending a *65 show near by, started to the Lutheran Crossing to take the car, and were going along this path, but when they got near the gully they saw an object lying across the path, one end in the short slope to the gully and the other end up in the crossties at the rail. They were afraid to go to it, but went round on the other side to the Lutheran Crossing and stopped there and waited for the headlight of the car to show what the object was, until the car was about forty feet from the deceased. It was too late then to stop the car or for the boys to help the deceased out of the way of danger. All the witnesses who testified on the subject said that a proper headlight properly adjusted would light up the track for two hundred yards with varying brightness, according to conditions. The body was dragged from the gully to and across the Lutheran Crossing, a distance of about one hundred and twenty feet.

The plaintiff alleged that the deceased was apparently in a helpless condition on the track, and was seen, or ought to have been seen, by the motorman, and that the death was due to the negligent and wilful and wanton disregard of its duty to those who were to be expected to be on the track.

The answer alleged that the deceased was a trespasser on its right of way. Denied want of care and pleaded contributory negligence, in that the deceased, while in an intoxicated condition, laid down on defendant’s track, and that the deceased caused his own injury by lying down on defendant’s track while in an intoxicated condition.

At the trial there was a motion for a nonsuit, which was refused; a motion for a direction of a verdict, which was also refused. There was a judgment for the plaintiff and defendant appealed upon the following exceptions:

“1. The presiding Judge erred in allowing the plaintiff to introduce in evidence over defendant’s objection the financial statement showing the wealth of the defendant, for the reason that as there was no evidence whatever *66 tending to show wilfulness, wantonness, or recklessness on the part of the defendant on which to base a verdict for punitive damages, the admission of • such evidence was incompetent, harmful and prejudicial to the rights of the defendant.”

This Court cannot say that there was no evidence on which to base punitive damages.

(Appellant, in his argument, says that exceptions IV, VII, X and XI raise the same quesiton.)

1 There was evidence that a proper headlight, properly adjusted, would throw light on the track for two hundred yards ahead of the car. The two boys who' were coming to the station without any light, saw the- de’ceased; went around him and watched him from the crossing, waiting for the light.to fall upon him. Joe Taylor, defendant’s witness, said: “We were looking at the object all the time. When the headlight fell on his body, I looked tó see- how close the car was, and it was in thirty-five or 'forty or fifty feet of him.” There was no witness who testified that the car could have been stopped in fifty feet. There was testimony, therefore, to show that the appellant was running its car that night with a light that afforded the motorman no possibility of stopping in time to avoid any sort of danger to people it might have been expected to find in danger on the track, or to its passengers on its cars. Was that a wilful and wanton disregard of all duty? That was a question for the jury. The appellant assumed all the way through the case that the deceased chose the railroad track for his bed and deliberately composed himself there for his’ drunken sleep. There is slight, if any, evidence of it. The deceased was sober enough to know of the approach to his station; walk down the car while it was still in motion; get off the car and start for home. Within a hundred feet of the place of alighting he is found with his feet in the declivity of a gully and his shoulders up in the crossties and his head at the iron rail. *67 The physical surroundings do not conclusively show that he deliberately made that place his bed.

This exception is overruled.

Exception II:

2 “The presiding Judge erred in allowing the plaintiff to elicit testimony from the witness, Gary Seigler, over the defendant’s objection, that it was the custom or habit of motormen running cars on defendant’s road to eat their meals on the car while so doing. The error being, as then and there urged, -that there was no such act of negligence alleged in the complaint, and the investigation being as to the alleged negligent operation of the particular car which ran over the deceased, any testimony as to acts, conduct, habit or custom of motormen operating other cars of defendant was irrelevant and incompetent, and the admission of said testimony was harmful and prejudicial to- the rights of the defendant.”

This exception cannot be sustained. The evidence did not tend to prove negligence on this particular occasion, but was admitted by the trial Judge under the allegation of “wilful and wanton acts,” and this ruling is fully sustained in principle by Mason v. Railway Co., 58 S. C. 74, 13 S. E. 440, 53 L. R. A. 913, 79 Am. St. Rep. 826, and Mack v. R. R. Co., 52 S. C. 323, 29 S. E. 905, 40 L. R. A. 679, 68 Am. St Rep. 913.

Exception III:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 S.E. 306, 97 S.C. 61, 1914 S.C. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirkland-v-augusta-aiken-ry-electric-corp-sc-1914.