McCoy v. P., W. B. R. R. Co.

10 Del. 599
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 5, 1879
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Del. 599 (McCoy v. P., W. B. R. R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCoy v. P., W. B. R. R. Co., 10 Del. 599 (Del. Ct. App. 1879).

Opinion

THIS was an action on the case for consequential damages by the plaintiff against the defendant for injuries to his person, his horse, carriage, and harness resulting from an accident in driving over the crossing of the railroad of the company at Fourth Street in the city of Wilmington, and which public crossing and street adjacent to it the company was at the time and had been for two weeks engaged in thoroughly and substantially relaying in the best and most improved method. The declaration alleged that during the progress of the work the company had torn up the entire bed of the public street at its intersection with the railroad, but had laid and maintained in the meanwhile a plank road of much diminished width across the railroad for the public use, and during the night on which the accident occurred had left a box-car standing on a railroad side track in Fourth Street, and so near the plank road as to scare his horse in his attempt to drive over it and cause him to run his carriage off one side of it, break one of the front wheels of it, and to throw him out violently upon the ground, thereby inflicting severe wounds and bruises on his back and other portions of his body, and to run away and break *Page 601 up his carriage and harness, and greatly impair his previously good and gentle qualities as a carriage horse.

During the examination of the witness it appeared in evidence that the plaintiff was only thrown from his seat against the dasher of the carriage, and was not thrown out of it at all upon the ground.

Gordon, for the defendant, objected that there could be no proof as to personal or bodily injuries sustained by the plaintiff in the accident except as alleged in the declaration, as it was material and described his case as it was stated and presented by him.

The Court sustained the objection and ruled out any further evidence as to the plaintiff's personal injuries.

The other facts in the case will sufficiently appear from charge of the court.

Lore, for the plaintiff, asked the court to charge the jury that when alleged contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff is relied upon by the defendant to defeat such an action as this, he must have been guilty of only ordinary negligence,Shear. Redf. on Neg., secs. 29, 30, 31, 32; that leaving the box-car standing on the bed of Fourth Street during the night constituted culpable negligence on the part of the company, it being contrary to an ordinance of the city which he had produced and read and a violation of law. Shear. Redf. on Neg., sec. 484. The right of the public to a highway is paramount to that of a railroad company for all other purposes than that of transit.Ogle v, P., W. B. R. R. 30., 3 Houst, 313.

The Court, That as the only matters in dispute between the counsel in the case were questions of fact for their determination alone on the evidence before them, the court would have been content to leave the case without a remark to their consideration and decision upon the evidence alone had not the counsel for the defendant craved the instruction of the court to the jury on the principles *Page 602 of law applicable to it as stated by him, and which we do not understand to be denied or objected to by the counsel for the plaintiff.

The entire evidence in the case, and particularly all the material facts involved in it, must now be apparent and familiar to you, as well from your recollection of it as detailed by the witnesses for the respective parties in the suit as by the discussion of it by the learned counsel engaged in trial of it before you, and we shall therefore forbear to refer to it specially, or to attempt to recapitulate the whole of it, or to repeat any portion of it, except as to such facts as appear to be wholly uncontroverted or uncontradicted by the conflicting testimony of the witnesses for the respective parties lest we might fail to fully appreciate the force and effect of it, or to present it with entire accuracy and completeness as it was delivered before you in the language of the witnesses themselves. Save on one point, I believe, material to the maintenance or defense of the action in this case the testimony produced on the part of the plaintiff as to every fact alleged and material to be proved, either in support or in defense of it, seems not only to conflict with but to directly contradict the testimony produced on the part of the defendant. This you doubtless have observed as well as the court, and while it is not our province in this stage of the case to form, and much less to intimate or express, any opinion as to the comparative weight or credibility of such contradictory testimony, and are glad we are relieved of the duty of determining that question, we can the better appreciate the grave responsibility which the law devolves upon the jury alone, and not upon the court of deciding it. Your duty, however, in determining such questions, when considering contradictory testimony is to reconcile it if be possible, but if it is not, then to ascertain to what extent and in what particulars it is irreconcilably inconsistent and contradictory. In estimating the probability of mistake or error on the part of wholly unbiased and impartial witnesses in a case, and in deciding on which side the error or mistake lies, much must depend upon the comparative intelligence and the means and opportunities of knowing the matter of fact in question of the respective witnesses, bearing in mind at the same time that positive is entitled to more weight than negative testimony, where *Page 603 even the number and their comparative intelligence, means, and opportunities of seeing or knowing it are equal at the time; and with these general rules for your guidance in the difficult task often devolved upon juries in cases of conflicting evidence so contradictory as to admit of no reconcilement or agreement whatever, it will be your duty to give credit to that portion of it which you may consider the best entitled to it, and to find for the party in whose favor the evidence appears to preponderate under all the facts and circumstances proved in the cause.

This is what is technically termed an action on the case by Douglas M. McCoy, the plaintiff, against the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad Company, the defendant, to recover damages for injuries sustained by him on the night of the 24th of January, 1878, at the intersection of the railroad of the defendant and Fourth Street in the city of Wilmington, and which he alleges resulted from the negligence of the defendant, and were caused by the servants and employees of the company negligently leaving one of their box-cars standing that night on the track of the railroad where it crosses Fourth Street, in the said city, extending two-thirds of its length into the street, and so close to the contracted and temporary street crossing which the company had there constructed for the passages of horses and vehicles across the track during the progress of certain repairs which they were then doing upon the crossing at its intersection with that street, as to frighten his horse and cause him to shy from the crossing and break and run away with his carriage, in which he was then riding with Mr. Sylvester D. Townsend, a friend and neighbor of his, and both of whom were then proceeding by the way of Fourth Street to their respective residences a short distance out of the city.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 Del. 599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccoy-v-p-w-b-r-r-co-delsuperct-1879.