Nickles v. Seaboard Air Line Ry.

54 S.E. 255, 74 S.C. 102, 1906 S.C. LEXIS 97
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 12, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 54 S.E. 255 (Nickles v. Seaboard Air Line 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
Nickles v. Seaboard Air Line Ry., 54 S.E. 255, 74 S.C. 102, 1906 S.C. LEXIS 97 (S.C. 1906).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Chile Justice Pope.

This is an action brought in the Court of Common Pleas of Abbeville, by the plaintiff Nickles, as the administrator of the estate of Rhoda B. Black, deceased, for the uses and benefit of T. F. Black, the husband of the said Rhoda B. Black, in accordance with the statute of this State, for damages amounting to $50,000. The complaint sets forth all facts and circumstances of the death of Mrs. Black. The answer of the defendant denied its liability. The report should set forth the case, the com.plaint and the amended answer (omitting plaintiff’s demurrer to a part of the answer, it having been overruled by the Circuit Judge and no appeal being taken therefrom). The case came on to b.e tried by his Honor, Judge Klugh, and a jury. The verdict for the plaintiff was for $8,000. After judgment thereon, the defendant appealed upon twenty-six grounds, which should be set forth in the report of this case.

The exceptions will be classed as follows: I. 1, 2; II. 3; III. 4; IV. 5, 6, 7, S, 9, 26; V. 10; VI. 11; VIL 12; VIII. 13; IX: 21; X. 19, 20; XI. 16; XII. 17; XIII. 14, 15; XIV. 22, 23, 24, 25; XV. 18.

Before proceeding with the examination of these exceptions the history of the case in general terms may be stated as follows: Thomas F. Black was a telegraph operator stationed at Haverhill, Ohio. His wife, the intestate, Rhoda B. Black, resided with her husband, said T. F. Black, at Haverhill, Ohio, having been married but a few months. *126 The defendant railway was anxious to secure his testimony in its behalf in a lawsuit pending trial at Elberton, Ga. A communication was.opened by the defendant with said T. F. Black by telegraph and an agreement was reached bv said Black with said defendant railway by which the said Black agreed to give his testimony at Elberton, provided some one should take his place, temporarily, as telegraph operator; that he should be paid for his services as telegraph operator while attending Court; that a ticket should be furnished to himself and wife to Elberton, Ga., from Haverhill, O. That on the 9th day of September, 1904, Black and wife were proceeding on their trip to' Elberton when on the night of the said 9th of September, while as passengers on the defendant railway, while crossing a trestle at a high rate of speed, about fifty miles an hour, while thirty-three miles an hour was the schedule speed, the entire train, consisting of the engine, tender, mail car, express car, the first and second passenger coaches and the Pullman car, were precipitated from the trestle, thirty feet high, to the ground. The trestle at the southern end gave way. The plaintiff claims that the trestle gave way because improperly constructed — the timber thereof being rotten and the bolts insecurely fastened, having no taps, etc. While the defendant claims that said trestle was constructed in a thorough manner and that the said train was thrown from the track on said trestle because of the placing of a bar of iron, by an unknown person, on said trestle, thus causing the engine to be forced from the track — the damage ensuing therefrom. The defendant denies that the timbers were rotten or that there was any error of construction of the Whisonant trestle. Both sides admit that Mrs. Rlioda Black was killed in the wreck, her neck being broken. A great deal of testimony was taken on each side as to the condition of the piling upon which the trestle was constructed. We will now consider the exceptions in groups.

*127 1 *126 I. These exceptions relate to an alleged error of the Circuit Judge in permitting the witness, T. F. Black, to state *127 the injuries received by him in the wreck, on the ground that such testimony was irrelevant and immaterial to the issues involved herein as prejudicial to the defendant. We cannot see that this testimony was anything but descriptive of the wreck. Defendant’s witnesses admitted that four persons were killed in the wreck. This witness was merely explaining the condition in which he groped about the car to find his wife’s dead body, there being no lights, the same having been extinguished by the fall of the coach over the embankment.

We see no possible objection to this testimony, and so as to the second exception, which relates to the objection to •Black’s testimony, wherein he said a second train of cars ran into and upon the wreck of the train upon which the plaintiff’s intestate was traveling. The witness having testified that his wife’s neck was broken before this second train ran into them. The objected testimony had some relevancy by showing what effect this second train had upon the trestle in question. This exception is overruled.

2 II. This exception sets up an alleged error of the Circuit Judge in allowing the witness Black to testify that he would hot have left Ohio unless the defendant railway should have extended its ticket to his wife, the intestate. Both sides admit thatffhe intestate was granted transportation from Ohio to Elberton, Ga., over defendant’s road. Both sides also' admit that there was quite an animated colloquy, by telegraph, between these parties. The witness Black had refused to come as a witness unless certain conditions were complied with. He apprised the railroad of his unwillingness to leave his young wife alone in Ohio in case he came to Elberton, Ga., and it seems, therefore, that it was not at all illegal for the witness to state that he would not have come for the defendant unless his wife was furnished transportation by the defendant. This exception is, therefore, overruled.

*128 3 *127 III. This exception imputes error to the Circuit Judge in refusing to allow the defendant to ask Nickles. the plain *128 tiff, on cross-examination, whether he had taken the oath of office as administrator, as required by law. The plaintiff had alleged in his complaint that he had been appointed administrator of the estate and the defendant in its answer had virtually denied the same. When it became necessary to establish the representative character of the plaintiff, without objection the plaintiff introduced the entire record of the probate court of York County from the petition for letters of administration through every step down to and including letters of administration granted by said probate court of York County, which record was certified to under the hand and seal of the probate judge of York County. Thus the record of such probate court was introduced without objection. Therefore, it is not in the power of the defendant, by its collateral attack upon such record, to nullify the same. The probate court, while a court of limited jurisdiction, is a court of record and not an inferior court as to matters clearly within its jurisdiction. Ex parte White, 38 S. C., 41, 16 S. E., 286, where the foregoing is announced, and it is also' held, that its grant of administration may be vacated only by direct proceeding. Hankinson v. Railway Co., 41 S. C., 1, 19 S.

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Bluebook (online)
54 S.E. 255, 74 S.C. 102, 1906 S.C. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nickles-v-seaboard-air-line-ry-sc-1906.