Lyon v. Charleston & Western Carolina Ry.

58 S.E. 12, 77 S.C. 328, 1907 S.C. LEXIS 169
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 10, 1907
Docket6584
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 58 S.E. 12 (Lyon v. Charleston & Western Carolina Ry.) 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
Lyon v. Charleston & Western Carolina Ry., 58 S.E. 12, 77 S.C. 328, 1907 S.C. LEXIS 169 (S.C. 1907).

Opinions

The opinion herein was handed down December 16, 1906, but on petition for rehearing case was ordered reargued at April Term, 1907.

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Woods.

The vital question in this case is whether the Circuit Judge erred in refusing a motion for a nonsuit and for new trial.

The plaintiff, a flagman on defendant’s freight train, while attempting to uncouple á moving car, fell, on the track and had his leg crushed. He brought this action for damages and recovered judgment, alleging the accident was due to the defendant’s negligence. Without taking up the exceptions in detail, we consider whether there is evidence to support any one of the several charges of negligence as a proximate cause of the injury. The case depends principally on the testimony of the plaintiff, who gave this account of the accident on his direct examination: “What did you doff We went and unloaded all of the freight that was for Hampton, and the conductor got out of the car and signed the engineer ahead, and the train rolled off at the rate of about three or four miles an hour. He ordered Stephen New, the brakeman, and myself, to cut the flat car loose, and let the rear of the train trail behind and roll clear of the siding, put the flat car in the side track, and come back to the main line and get the train and go on to Brunson to meet 41, a passenger train. Stephen New went and caught hold of the lever on the cattle car to cut it loose from the flat. The lever was hard to work and it seemed like it was impossible for 'him to cut the car, and I knew I could not, and I crossed over to the corner of the flat car and pulled the lever, and a jerk from the car threw me under the rolling train behind. There was no air on the train.

*332 “What happened when you fell under there? The front trucks of the cattle car rolled over me, broke my leg, fractured my hip and ankle, broke my collar-bone, and bruised my shoulder, and cut a gash in my head.” On cross-examination, he says: “Just state again how it happened; where were you and what were you undertaking to do, to carry out the conductor’s orders? Just tell what you were doing. Stephen New, when we got orders, he went over and caught hold of the lever on the cattle car and was pulling it. Was the lever on the cattle car so that you could stand on the outside, without going in between the cars and uncouple it, one of those iron automatic levers? Yes, sir; it don’t set outside the car, it sets in between. You can stand outside of the car without going in between them? Yes, sir. And you intended to turn that lever over and raise the peg up and uncouple the car? That was Steve New’s idea, and it seemed he could not work his lever. When Steve New caught hold of that lever, where were you? On the flat car. Why did you g-et on the flat car? I was going down with the train, and when it got near the siding I was going to get on the top of the cattle car and apply the brakes, as ordered to do. How were you going- to get across the gap between the flat car and the cattle car ? Several ways; I could have got down on the ground and got up, or I could have reached over and got the ladder. You knew that Steve New was going to separate them as soon as he could? He was getting pretty close to the clear post, and he had not got them loose, and I just pulled the lever on the flat car. When Steve New first caught hold of the lever where were you? I was on the flat car. You g-ot on the flat car? I was already on the flat car. I just got up to ride on down. There was not any need of my trotting beside it. You got on the flat car the first thing you did, before Steve New caught hold of the lever; that is true, is it not? I don’t recollect about that. You knew that as soon as Steve New worked that lever, if it worked all right, the cars would separate? Yes, sir; but as I cut the car I was expecting to give my own *333 signals, but .it was done before I could do it. I thought you said that Steve New was going to cut the car off? I said he was trying to pull it up and it looked like he could not get the lever to work, and I pulled the lever on the flat car. But when you went on the flat car, you did not intend to have anything to1 do with the lever ? I was going to carry out the orders of the conductor. Didn’t you, when you got on the flat car, think that Steve New would operate the lever so as to separate the cars? I knew that was his intention, sir. And at that time you did not intend to have anything to do with uncoupling the cars? I was going to carry out the orders of the conductor, and I could not have done it otherwise. But when you got on the flat car, your intention was that Steve New should do the uncoupling, and then you were to get over on the other car and put on brakes ? Yes, sir; but when he could not do it, there was but one lever on his side, and I was compelled to pull the lever. And when he had difficulty in uncoupling, you undertook to help him? Yes, sir.”

1 Negligence as a proximate cause of the injury is charged against the conductor, in that he “ordered, required and directed this plaintiff to get upon and uncouple the said cars while in motion, and get upon and apply the brakes to the trailing cars while in motion, and in leaving the train without seeing that his orders were carried out and the train operated with due care, without a sudden increase of the speed of the train.”

The plaintiff’s own account shows clearly the accident was due to his act of leaning over the corner of the moving car and uncoupling it by pulling a lever at the side. But there is no evidence whatever that the conductor ordered the plaintiff to get upon the moving car and uncouple it from that position, or even saw him when he did it. There is evidence of an order from the conductor to uncouple the moving car, but a lever was provided on each side of the car as a means of uncoupling from the ground. That the plaintiff, as well as New, understood the order to mean that the *334 lever should be used from the ground is conclusively shown by his evidence that they went about the uncoupling in that manner — New handling the lever and the plaintiff mounting the car in order to leap over on another car and put on the brakes as New uncoupled.

New, the brakeman, made an unsuccessful effort to use the lever on his side from the ground, and then the plaintiff, without giving any signal to stop the train or attempting to use thedever on the other side from the ground, or even reporting to the conductor or receiving any order from him, of his own volition, without even giving notice to any one in control of the motion of the train of his intention, attempted the perilous feat, of stooping over from the moving car and pulling the lever below him. There is no ground for saying the order of the conductor required or contemplated such peril. Without doubt, when an order is given, it is the duty of the servant to take the safe way of carrying it out, if one is provided; and if that fails, he cannot, except, perhaps, in cases of emergency arising from the fault of the master, charge the master with the result of using a dangerous method not in the purview of the order.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 S.E. 12, 77 S.C. 328, 1907 S.C. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyon-v-charleston-western-carolina-ry-sc-1907.