Overby v. Chesapeake & Ohio R'y Co.

16 S.E. 813, 37 W. Va. 524, 1893 W. Va. LEXIS 1
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 28, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 16 S.E. 813 (Overby v. Chesapeake & Ohio R'y 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
Overby v. Chesapeake & Ohio R'y Co., 16 S.E. 813, 37 W. Va. 524, 1893 W. Va. LEXIS 1 (W. Va. 1893).

Opinion

ENGLISH, President :

This was an action of trespass on the ease, brought by Warren Overby against the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Company on the 24th day of August, 1889, in the Circuit Court of Cabell county, to recover damages for an injury received while in the service of said company, which resulted in the loss of a portion of his right hand. The declaration was demurred to, the demurrer was overruled, issue was joined upon the plea of not guilty, and on the 20th day of March, 1890, the case was submitted to a jury, and resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff of five thousand dollars. This verdict was, on motion of the defendant, set aside, and a new trial awarded, and on the 8th day of December, 1890, the case was again submitted to a jury, who found a verdict for the plaintiff for two thousand five hundred dollars. A motion was made to set this verdict aside on the ground that the same was contrary to the law and evidence, which motion was overruled, and judgment was rendered against the defendant upon said last named verdict. The defendant excepted, and tendered its bill of exceptions, in which the evidence adduced in the case is fully set forth, and the material facts are as follows:

Oh the 5th day of December, 1888, the plaintiff', Warren Overby, was employed by the defendant as an engineer, and was running what is known as a “yard engine” at the city of Huntington, and had been in the employ of the defendant about four years. lie had, however, been running an engine for the defendant about three months, most of the time in the roundhouse yard, and about the engine works, and on the depot yard. In said depot yard the defendant had stretched two semaphore wires between the main track and a side track, which the plaintiff avers in his declaration were three inches from the ground and four inches apart, which wire had been in that position for about three months before the accident; and the plaintiff, in his testimony, states that he noticed them soon after they werefirst put up there. About four o’clock in the morning of the 5th of December, 1888, he testifies that he noticed that his headlight was out on the tender; that he took a lighted torch, and proceeded to look for an extra globe on the en[527]*527gine ; that lie got off of the engine to see if Fox had a headlight glohe,hnt Fox did not have any, and he returned, and set his torch on the engine, and stopped hack to see what kind of signals they were giving. There was a confusion of signals, and just as he got hack some distance they gave the hacking up signal, and started to hack up, and he started to get on the engine between the north main line and the side track. The night was very dark, and the engine was-runuing at the speed of about, three miles an hour when the plaintiffs foot hung in the wire, and he fell with his hand on one of the rails, and the engine ran over it and crushed it.

The plaintiff', in reply to the question, “How often did you notice them ?” (meauiugthe wires) answered : “Inoticed them in passing them, I could not say how often;” that he could see them in the daytime from his engine. They were right hy the north main line. The plaintiff also states in his testimony, when asked, “If the engine had not been moving, would it have cut your hand off ?” “Ho sir; nor if the wires had not been there it would not have cut my hand oft' either.”

A receipt, signed hy the plaintiff', in the following words and figures, was also offered, in evidence : “Receipt for time car.I, rules, aud regulations. Received September 15th. 1885, of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway, a copy of time table Ho. 27, dated Sept. 16th, 1888, containing conditions of employment, and rules governing its employes all of which I promise to read carefully, and to comply with their stipulations.” Rule Ho. 142 in the time table as receipted for was also read in evidence, and is in the following words :

“Every employe is required to exercise the utmost care to avoid injury to himsef or his fellow employes, aud specially in switching or other movements of cars and trains. In coupling cars a stick should always be used to guide the link whenever it is possible to make the coupling in this way, and yard master, switchman, brakeman, or other employe who may be expected to couple cars should .provide himself with and keep at all times a stick for that purpose. A supply of these sticks is always kept at divisional head[528]*528quarters. Jumping on or off trains or engines when in motion, entering between cars, when in motion, to uncouple them, and all such imprudences, are dangerous, and in violation of the rules of this company.”

The plaintiff's hand was crushed by the wheels of the moving engine, and it is manifest that, if the car had been stationary, the injury would not have resulted. The wire might have caused him to stumble and fall, but his hand would not have been crushed by the wheel.

The evidence discloses that the night was very dark, and that the plaintiff, leaving his engine in charge of the fireman, took his torch, and went in search of a globe for his headlight; that he returned and placed his torch on the engine, which was then standing . still, and passed back over these wires, in order that he might see what kind of signals they were giving. He knew of the existence of these wires, as is shown by his testimony, and by his statements made in Richmond, in which he says he had fallen over them in the daytime, he thought, and he knew of others who had fallen over them, and he knew they were dangerous.

This Court held in the case of Hoffman v. Dickinson, 31 W. Va. 142 (6 S. E. Rep. 53) p’t 9 of Syllabus : “If the master has been guilty of negligence in failing to procure suitable appliances or machinery for carrying on his business, and injury results therefrom to his servant, he must respond in damages, unless the servant, well knowing the default in this respect, enters upon the employment,or continues therein after such knowledge* * * “in such case he assumes the increased risk, and can not hold the master responsible for the consequences.”

The evidence in the case leaves no room for doubt upon the question as to whether the plaintiff had knowledge of the existence of these wires, their locality, and the manner in which they were stretched between the tracks.

It is true that in 1 Shear. & R. Neg, § 213, the author says: “-In analogy to the principles already stated under the head of‘contributory negligence,’ the servant’s rights are not prejudiced by his forgetfulness of or failure to observe a defect under the influence of sudden alarm, or of an [529]*529urgent demand for speed, or if his duties are such as necessarily to absorb his whole attention, leaving him no reasonable opportunity to look for defects.”

Yet in this case it must he-remembered that the night was dark, and the plaintiff had left the torch he had been carrying upon the engine, and crossed over these wires, without any light of any character, for the purpose of observing the signals; and, after he had satisfied himself upon this point, he was returning to his engine, which was moving at the rate of three' or four miles an hour, for the purpose of getting on said moving engine, in direct violation of rule ISTo. 142, which he does not pretend to have forgotten.

There was no sudden alarm, or urgent demand for speed, nor were his duties at that time such as necessarily to absorb his whole attention, leaving him no opportunity to look for defects.

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Bluebook (online)
16 S.E. 813, 37 W. Va. 524, 1893 W. Va. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/overby-v-chesapeake-ohio-ry-co-wva-1893.