Lyon v. Charleston & Western Carolina Ry.

66 S.E. 282, 84 S.C. 364, 1909 S.C. LEXIS 261
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 2, 1909
Docket7400
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 66 S.E. 282 (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., 66 S.E. 282, 84 S.C. 364, 1909 S.C. LEXIS 261 (S.C. 1909).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Woods.

This action for personal injuries received by the plaintiff, while in the service of the defendant as flagman, rests on the allegation that because of the negligence of the defendant, he was thrown from a flat car attached to a moving freight train, and was run over by a cattle car which he had just uncoupled in obedience to an order of the conductor.

On the first trial of the cause the plaintiff recovered judgment, but on appeal this Court held that the Circuit Court should have granted a nonsuit, because the evidence, adduced on the trial by the plaintiff, clearly showed that the negligence of the plaintiff, if not the sole cause, was at least a contributing proximate cause of the accident and the resulting injury. Accordingly, the judgment of the Circuit Court was reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial. The cause then came on for' a hearing before Judge Gage and resulted in a mistrial. It was afterwards tried for a second time before Judge Memminger and resulted in "a judgment for the plaintiff, from which the defendant appeals.

1 The original complaint contained an allegation that the plaintiff undertook to get upon and uncouple the moving cars in obedience to the negligent and reckless order of the conductor of the train, and it contained also this allegation as paragraph nine: “That immediately after giving the instructions, directions, and order aforesaid, the conductor left the said train and went into the depot of the said defendant and absented himself from the said train.” After the cause was remanded for a new trial, amendments were allowed, striking out paragraph nine and inserting as paragraph fifteen this allegation: “That the said defendant was further negligent, careless and reckless in that the said conductor, who was in charge of the train, whose duty it was to see that the same was properly, safely and securely operated, left the same and did not remain to *386 see that the trainmen and engineer carried out his instructions and orders and the duty assigned to them with due care, and to see that the speed of the said train was not increased suddenly and violently until the plaintiff had safely gotten down and off the said flat car, which negligence, carelessness and recklessness was a direot and proximate oause of said injuries.”

The first exception charging error in allowing the amendments cannot be sustained; because the allowance or refusal of amendments was within the discretion of the Circuit Judge, and there is nothing to indicate an abuse of discretion: Taylor v. A. C. L., 81 S. C., 574, 62 S. E., 1113; German-Am. Ins. Co. v. So. Ry., 83 S. C., 1.

3 The next position taken by appellant is, that the Circuit Court should have granted a nonsuit, because the evidence of the plaintiff on the last trial showed that he was injured while doing the very thing which this Court had held to be negligence contributing to his injury as a proximate cause, and without which it would not have been received; and that the evidence on the issues of negligence and contributory negligence was substantially the same as on the first trial.

The proposition admits of no doubt that when this Court orders a new trial, holding that a plaintiff should have been nonsuited; and on the second trial he adduces substantially the same evidence as on the first, the matter is res judicaia, and a nonsuit must result. The principle was considered and stated in Jones v. Ry. Co., 65 S. C., 410, 43 S. E., 884. But a physical act accompanied by some circumstances might show negligence beyond dispute, when the same act under other circumstances might well admit the inference that it was taken with due care. The inquiry then is, whether the plaintiff on the last trial made out a substantially different case from that presented to .the Court on the former appeal. The substance of the evidence on the former trial, which the Court held would prevent a recovery, was this: *387 The train was at Hampton and the conductor, being in haste to get away, signalled the engineer to move, and while the train was going three or four miles an hour, ordered plaintiff and New, a colored brakeman, to cut a flat car loose, let the rear of the train trail 'behind and roll clear off the siding, put the flat car on the sidetrack and come back to' the main line, get on the train and go to Brunson to meet No. él, a passenger train. Plaintiff got on the flat car, not intending to uncouple, but with the purpose either to leap to the ground and then on the cattle car following, or to .jump or step from the flat car to the cattle car after New had uncoupled. New, the brakeman, made an unsuccessful effort from the ground to use 'the lever on his side of the car. The plaintiff then, without giving a signal to stop the train or attempting to use the lever from the other side, or reporting to the conductor, or giving notice to anyone in control of the motion of the train, knelt on the edge of the flat car and uncoupled the lever with his hand. ■ While in this position, by a sudden jerk of the train, he was thrown between .the cars and injured.

The plaintiff testified that one walking on the ground could have used the lever provided at the side without going between the cars, and there was no evidence that such use of the lever was attended with any risk whatever, either from the nature of the ground or otherwise. It being perfectly evident, unless the most familiar physical laws were to be ignored, that the method of uncoupling used by the plaintiff was dangerous; and he himself testifying that he could have uncoupled from the ground 'by the use of a lever intended to be so used without going between the cars, and there being not a particle of evidence that there was danger in that method, -the Court could not avoid the conclusion that the plaintiff used an obviously dangerous method, when a reasonabfy safe method was at hand.

But the evidence was far from the same on the last trial. The plaintiff’s own testimony is widely different in a num *388 ber of particulars. He testified the last time that because of the arm of the lever not being flush with the side of the car, but eighteen or twenty inches from the side, it could not be used from the ground without going between the cars, and that for this reason it was more dangerous to use the lever from the ground than in the way he adopted. In this last statement, he was corroborated by witnesses who had had experience in the operation of cars. The general import of the evidence for the plaintiff was that it was dangerous to uncouple moving cars in any manner, that the method used by the plaintiff is less dangerous than to uncouple from the ground, unless the ground is even and the ann of the lever flush with the end of the car, so that there would be no necessity to go between the cars.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 S.E. 282, 84 S.C. 364, 1909 S.C. LEXIS 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyon-v-charleston-western-carolina-ry-sc-1909.