Nichols v. Raleigh Wyoming Mining Co.

169 S.E. 451, 113 W. Va. 631, 1933 W. Va. LEXIS 211
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 9, 1933
Docket7503
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 169 S.E. 451 (Nichols v. Raleigh Wyoming Mining 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
Nichols v. Raleigh Wyoming Mining Co., 169 S.E. 451, 113 W. Va. 631, 1933 W. Va. LEXIS 211 (W. Va. 1933).

Opinion

Maxwell, Peesident :

Raleigh-Wyoming Mining Company prosecutes this writ to a judgment for $6,500.00 rendered on a verdict against it in favor of Earl Nichols, as administrator of Kathleen Nichols, deceased, for her wrongful death.

Kathleen Nichols was fatally injured about 8:15 p. m., June 3, 1930, when she was crushed between two uncoupled loaded coal cars while attempting to pass between them on the way to her home in defendant’s coal camp. On a former trial of the case the court directed a verdict for defendant. This Court reversed that judgment in Nichols v. Raleigh-Wyoming Coal Co., 112 W. Va. 85, 163 S. E. 767, and remanded the case for a new trial.

Defendant, a coal mining corporation, had been conducting operations at Edwight, Raleigh County, for several years prior to the date of the accident resulting in the death of Mrs. Nichols. The tipple, sidetracks and miners’ camp, called Stringtown, were located across ITazy Creek a short distance above the company store, postoffice, theater, school, and churches. The house in which plaintiff and his family lived was about 200 feet from the tipple, which could be distinctly seen from his front porch. Defendant maintained for its employees a foot bridge across Hazy Creek just above the company store in order to avoid the inconvenience of traveling around a long curve in the road which extended from Stringtown along the edge of the town to the lower end thereof. The path from this bridge, in the direction of String-town, crossed the tracks in front of the supply house, approximately half way between the bridge and the tipple, and joined the said road in front of the third house below plaintiff’s. The path was much used because it afforded a shorter route and was in better condition than the road. There is much evidence on the part of the plaintiff that miners and their families residing in Stringtown were in the habit of crossing the tracks at any point where they could find open *633 ings between coal cars, and that when there were no openings they would crawl under ears or climb over couplings.

For about two years before the tragedy, defendant had followed a definite routine in operating the tipple. After a car had been loaded, a gong, which could be heard several hundred yards, was sounded, and the tipple stopped. The car, under the supervision of a brakeman, was dropped by gravity into position on one of the tracks. Three 250 watt lights on the tipple lighted the tracks for 200 feet or more in the direction of the loaded cars.

On the evening of the accident, Mrs. Nichols, accompanied by her four-year old child, went from her home by way of the path and footbridge to Edwight, to get her other two children, aged six and 'eight, who were attending a show. She was gone no longer than ten or fifteen minutes.. Returning at dusk by way of the footbridge, she did not cross at the supply house, but continued upi the tracks, which was lined with loaded cars, until within 140 feet of the tipple, where she attempted to cross through a three-foot opening between two cars. Her two youngest children, preceding her, got safely through the opening, but she was caught between the couplings of the cars. Witnesses for plaintiff testify that the crossing at the supply house was blocked when Mrs. Nichols returned, but this is denied by several witnesses for defendant. The brakeman moving thenars down the track from the tipple testified that the last car he had placed before the accident had failed to roll far enough to be coupled to the car ahead, and therefore he “bumped” it with the next car in order to close the opening. It was in this opening and at the instant when the car was bumped that Mrs. Nichols was crushed. The brakeman testified that he could not see Mrs. Nichols from his position at the brake on the rear of the car.

The evidence is hopelessly conflicting as to the condition of the road between Stringtown and the main part of Edwight and the general use thereof by pedestrians; as to whether defendant provided other safe, suitable and convenient ways of travel for the people at Stringtown; and how and where the tracks were generally crossed.

L. T. Putman, general superintendent of defendant, testified that there was no path at the point where Mrs. Nichols *634 undertook to cross the tracks, but admitted knowing that pedestrians sometimes crossed there; that prior to June 3, 1930. he had twice instructed a peace officer of the company to notify every family in Stringtown to keep off the tracks; that he had maintained notices along the tracks for more than a year prior to the accident warning pedestrians of danger; and that every time he saw anyone on the tracks near the tipple he “ordered them off”. Jean Monico, mining engineer for defendant, testified that nine warning notices had been posted between the tipple and the bridge prior to. 1928 and that they were still posted at the time of the accident; that there was no path from the supply house to the tipple; and that it was the same distance tp Mrs. Nichols’ home the way she attempted to return as it would have been had she crossed into the road in front of the supply house. Jess Wills, peace officer for defendant, testified that before the accident he twice notified every family in Stringtown to keep their children off the tracks “where they were loading coal”; but admitted that he could not recall the names of any persons he so notified or whether he notified Mrs. Nichols. Two witnesses for defendant testified that Wills twice notified them to keep their children off the tracks near the tipple. Three witnesses for defendant who worked in and about the tipple testified that they repeatedly told pedestrians who came near the tipple to stay off the tracks. Five witnesses for plaintiff, upon being recalled, stated that they had lived in Stringtown prior to the accident but had never been told by anyone to keep off the sidetracks.

We stated on prior review of this case that it involved matters proper for jury consideration. But that of course means that jury determination of the issues of fact involved must be under proper instructions of the trial court. Defendant excepted to the refusal of several instructions offered by it, and to the court’s giving to the jury plaintiff’s instruction No. 1.

Plaintiff’s said instruction is as follows:

“The court instructs the jury that if you believe from the preponderance of the evidence in this case that Kathleen Nichols lived in a portion of defendant ’s mining town with her husband and children in *635

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Bluebook (online)
169 S.E. 451, 113 W. Va. 631, 1933 W. Va. LEXIS 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nichols-v-raleigh-wyoming-mining-co-wva-1933.