Layne v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co.

69 S.E. 700, 68 W. Va. 213, 1910 W. Va. LEXIS 110
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 69 S.E. 700 (Layne v. Chesapeake & Ohio 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
Layne v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co., 69 S.E. 700, 68 W. Va. 213, 1910 W. Va. LEXIS 110 (W. Va. 1910).

Opinion

Miller, Judge:

This is an action by • Henry 0. Layne against the railway company, to recover damages for injuries alleged to have .been [215]*215sustained by Mm at the hands of one John L. Howery, a special police officer of defendant, in December, 1905. It grows out of the same transactions involved in Layne’s administrator against the defendant company, in which Eobert Layne, a brother of plaintiff, was shot and mortally wounded. That case, affirming the judgment below, was decided here November 23, 1909, and is reported in 66 W. Va. 607.

The verdict and judgment below in favor of the plaintiff in this case was for the sum of $5,000.00, to reverse which this writ of error is being prosecuted.

This case, involving as it does the same facts and circumstances involved in the case of Eobert Layne calls for the application of the same legal rules and principles enunciated and applied in that ease, unless there be good reasons for modifying or departing from them, and we perceive none, and none have been presented in the briefs and arguments of counsel.

,The only material facts differentiating this from the former case, are that in the Eobert Layne case he was shot and fatally wounded just after he had alighted from defendant’s train, and had had time to go but a few steps. He had not completed his journey, his destination being a station beyond Malden, plaintiff’s destination.. In this case Henry O. Layne had alighted from the train, and, on demand of the train porter, had paid his fare, not previously demanded or called for by the conductor or other train officer, and, leaving his brother Eobert in the act of demanding for him a cash receipt, for the cash fare paid, had gone some twelve to fifteen steps in the direction of the place of exit from the railway property, near the eastern end of the station house, but still on the station grounds or premises, when, on hearing the report of a pistol shot, and the announcement of some one in the crowd at the station, that Howery had shot Eobert Layne, he laid down his bundles on the station platform, and went back a few steps in the direction of the pistol shot, found Howery in the act of raising up from over the prostrate body of his brother, who on seeing him leveled his gun at Layne and fired, the ball hitting plaintiff in the left side, inflicting a slight flesh wound. Layne ^succeeded afterwards in wresting the gun from Howery’s hand, and started away with it, pursued by Howery and two other train officers, one of whom fired one or two additional shots at Layne, but the [216]*216latter made a safe retreat across the public road, and through a store on the opposite side from the railway station.

It would be useless to again recite the facts common to both cases, or to go into a new consideration of the legal principles enunciated and applied in the former case, although able briefs have been filed, and elaborate oral arguments were made at the bar on the hearing. We will therefore confine ourselves to a consideration and disposition of those points or questions which counsel for the plaintiff in error regard as peculiar to this case, and as not having been involved in the former decision.

First, it is contended that plaintiff, at the time he was shot, and shot at, by Ilowery, and other servants of the railway company, had ceased to be a passenger, that by returning to the scene of the trouble between Ilowery and his brother Robert he ceased to be a passenger, and forfeited all right as passenger to protection by defendant and its agents. The general rule, alluded to in the opinion in the Robert Layne ca^e, “is that the relation of carrier and passenger does not terminate until the passenger has alighted from the train and left the place where the passengers are discharged.” Elliott on Railroads, section 1592. It only ceases, as a general rule, after a passenger has arrived at the place of his destination and has had reasonable time to get pff the car or vehicle and to leave the premises of the carrier. 2 Sher. & Red. on Neg. (5th Ed.) section 490, pp. 884-5. And it continues, says this writer, for example, “while a passenger by a train is walking along tire station platform, without unreasonable delay, though it be his intention to leave the platform at a point where he will become a trespasser.” Reasonable time in such cases, means reasonable time under all the circumstances. Chicago Ry. Co. v. Wood, 104 Fed. 663. And “what is a reasonable time must often depend upon the circumstances of the particular case.” 4 Elliott on R. R., section 1592. “And where the passenger is necessarily hindered or delayed in leaving the carrier’s premises, the question whether he failed to depart within a reasonable time is one of fact for the jury.” 2 Hutch, on Carriers, (3rd Ed.), section 1016. The case of C. & O. Ry. Co. v. King, 99 Fed. 251, is an illustration of the application of these general principles. The plaintiff was injured while crossing the railroad tracks intervening between' the station house and the nearest public highway to the [217]*217town. The court held, that “if a passenger on a railroad train alights by direction of the company, or by its implied invitation, at a place where, in order to leave the premises of the company, it is necessary to cross intervening tracks, he remains a passenger until he has crossed such tracks, provided- he uses the means of egress 'which the company has provided, or which is customarily used with its knowledge and consent.” Houston &c. R., Co. v. Batchler, (Tex.) 83 S. W. 904, is another illustration of the same character. Batchler, the plaintiff, when he had arrived at the end of his journey, stopped on the platform of the station and talked for a short time with a friend before starting to leave the premises of the railway company. As he started to leave he was assaulted by the conductor of the train on which he had been a passenger, and the defense there, as here, was that the plaintiff was not a passenger at the time of the assault. The court, however, ruled that a passenger does not cease, ipso facto, to be such upon the arrival of the train at the point of his destination, but he has a reasonable time thereafter in which to alight from the train and leave the premises of the company. And the court held, in accordance with Hutchinson on Carriers, supra, that “what, under all the circumstances, is a reasonable time, is a question of fact, which must be determined by the jury.” Other cases cited by counsel as illustrating the application of the general rule are: Glenn v. Lake Erie &c. R. Co., 75 N. E. 282; Gaynor v. Old Colony &c. Ry. Co., 100 Mass. 208, and Texas & P. Ry. Co. v. Dick, 63 S. W. 895. In the first of these cases, the court held that, “In case of an accident involving a passenger, who on alighting from the train intended and desired to depart from the place at once, but 'was hindered and delayed, the question as to what is a reasonable time should be determined from the attendant facts and circumstances given in explanation or excuse for such delay.” In the Massachusetts case the plaintiff, a passenger on a train was injured after leaving the train and platform upon which he had been discharged, while crossing a side track in an effort to get to an old car for a necessary purpose, and from which he intended to proceed on an adjoining street to his home. The court held that when injured he was still a passenger and entitled to protection as such, not only while in the car, but while upon the premises of the railway company.

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Bluebook (online)
69 S.E. 700, 68 W. Va. 213, 1910 W. Va. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/layne-v-chesapeake-ohio-railway-co-wva-1910.