May v. Charleston Interurban Railroad

84 S.E. 893, 75 W. Va. 797, 1915 W. Va. LEXIS 244
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 84 S.E. 893 (May v. Charleston Interurban Railroad) 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
May v. Charleston Interurban Railroad, 84 S.E. 893, 75 W. Va. 797, 1915 W. Va. LEXIS 244 (W. Va. 1915).

Opinion

Miller,, Judge :

Plaintiff obtained a verdict and judgment for two thousand dollars, for personal injuries due to the alleged negligence of defendant in permitting its railway track, on Virginia street, in the City of Charleston, at the point where the injuries were sustained, to become so charged with electricity as to be dangerous to persons and animals travelling thereon. Plaintiff alleged that while riding over said street on horseback [799]*799and -without fault on his part the horse he was riding suddenly stepped upon one of the rails of said track and received a violent shock therefrom, causing him to then and there suddenly fall to the ground, and upon plaintiff, injuring his leg and otherwise bruising and hurting him and causing him permanent injury.

Defendant company seeks reversal here of that judgment, ■and the errors assigned and relied on are: First, the overruling of its motion, at the conclusion thereof to exclude plaintiff’s evidence and direct a verdict in its favor; second, the refusal of the court, on the conclusion of the evidence on both sides, to instruct the jury peremptorily to return a verdict for defendant; third, the denial of its motion, after verdict, to set the same aside, and award it a new trial, for the reasons assigned, that the same was contrary to the law and the evidence.

Many of our decisions say that a defendant’s motion to exclude the evidence of plaintiff is waived, if, after the adverse action of the court thereon, defendant proceeds with the trial and introduces to the jury his evidence on the issues joined. So we need not here separately consider this point. The other points of error manifestly present but one question, namely, is the verdict sustained by a fair preponderance of the evidence ? If it is, of course the judgment must be affirmed.

The main issues fought out before the jury were, whether the fall of the horse was due to the alleged negligence of defendant, or to stumbling of the horse by striking his foot on the paved street or the steel rail of defendant’s track, unaffected by any supposed negligence of defendant, and whether in fact the rail was charged with electricity in a way to have caused the fall of the horse. That the horse did fall upon the track, injuring plaintiff, as charged, is conceded; and the testimony of the plaintiff, and several other witnesses, disinterested, who were present and observed the fall of the horse and the character thereof, and the electrical manifestation on the track at the instant of the fall, if not contrary to the physical facts, and known and proven characteristics of electric currents over the wires, motors and tracks employed by defendant in the operation of its railway at the time of the injuries, certainly justified the verdict of the jury on the [800]*800fact of negligence. The evidence of the witnesses was, that the horse fell as his foot struck the track, not as if stumbling in the ordinary way, but as if shot, that his feet fell right from under him, and that he fell straight down. These witnesses were all familiar with horses, and skilled in observing and handling them, most of them were horse men, traders in horses, and some of them say they knew the fall was not a stumble, that it was peculiar and not like a stumble, and for this reason their attention was particularly attracted by it. And several witnesses concur in saying that as the horse struck the rail with his foot sparks flew out, one says it looked more like a string of fire than sparks. Plaintiff also swears that as he fell on the pavement he struck-his finger against the rail, and that it knocked him over, gave him a twist, and that was when the broken bone of his leg ran through the flesh, causing him great pain. A buggy was passing over the track at the same time, and some of the witnesses, including the man riding in the buggy, witnessing the occurrence, swear positively, that when the iron tire of one of the wheels, the other wheels having rubber tires, struck the same rail, it jumped up a foot or more. All the expert witnesses concur in saying that when bonds on the rails are broken or defective the rails at the bonds may become very hot, and thereby become welded together, producing a new bond.

As to whether it was possible for the electricity in the rails, employed by defendant for motive power as it was, to escape from the rail and cause the injury as alleged, two expert witnesses, one for plaintiff and one for defendant, the defendant’s witness being its track foreman, concur in saying that if the bond between the rails was broken or defective, a horse or man coming in contact with the rail, as claimed by plaintiff, would receive a shock, and would be liable to get burned, particularly if the contact was between the point where the bond was broken and the power house. And defendant’s track foreman says he has seen horses fall on the track from such shocks when there were bad bonds. Another expert witness for defendant, an electrical engineer, having a college degree as such, and manifesting a great deal of technical learning, and with considerable experience, particularly in the practical construction of electrical machinery, and in[801]*801stalling electrical plants of various kinds, said that “Theoretically and practically there is no possible way that a horse could get a shock sufficient to knock him down off of the street car rail only.” This witness goes into considerable detail in explaining the operations of electric currents over the wires, and rails, to justify his opinion that the accident and injury to plaintiff could not have resulted in the manner described by plaintiff’s witnesses.

Strange it is that no tests were made at the time of the injury or afterwards to ascertain whether the bonds on the rails were broken or defective; or whether the rail which was supposed to have done the injury was in fact charged with electricity as claimed. Plaintiff’s counsel excuse him by saying that the rails were mostly under ground, or flush with the street pavement, and buried in brick and cement, and entirely under the control of defendant company, and, that it was the duty of defendant, denying defective bonding of the rails, to have made all proper tests, and to overcome by positive evidence the presumption of negligence, arising from the fact of the accident and attendant facts and circumstances tending to show negligence. We think there is much force in this position of counsel, and that the general rule that where evidence is in the possession of one party and he has the means of producing it, and fails to do so, the conclusion may be drawn that if produced the evidence would be against him.

True we have no positive evidence that bonds on the rails at the point of the injury were broken or defective; and whether the dangerous condition of the rail causing the injury was due to defective bonding or to defects in other appliances employed by defendant does not clearly appear by any affirmative evidence of the witnesses. The question then is, do the facts proven and above briefly detailed, by a fair preponderance, establish the fact of negligence, justifying the verdict? We have concluded that they do. We think the jury could reasonably conclude that the rail struck by plaintiff and his horse was overloaded with electricity, and that it was escaping as described by the witnesses. Besides the injury to plaintiff personally, the evidence tends to show the horse’s hoof was also burned or injured by the escaping [802]*802■electricity.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 S.E. 893, 75 W. Va. 797, 1915 W. Va. LEXIS 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/may-v-charleston-interurban-railroad-wva-1915.