Railway Co. v. Valleley

32 Ohio St. (N.S.) 345
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1877
StatusPublished

This text of 32 Ohio St. (N.S.) 345 (Railway Co. v. Valleley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Railway Co. v. Valleley, 32 Ohio St. (N.S.) 345 (Ohio 1877).

Opinion

Ashburn, J.

We reverse the judgment of the court below, on the ground that the verdict was not sustained by the evidence, and should have been set aside upon the motion for a new trial.

Defendant in error, Mary Valleley administratrix, brought suit against the railroad company, to recover for the death of her brother, John Valleley, killed by the cars, as is supposed. Deceased -was unmarried, and left a mother and sisters, for whose benefit this suit was brought. On the 6th September, 1870, John Valleley took passage in cars of the defendant, at Alliance, to go to Canton. He was a young man, less than twenty-one years of age. Before he took the train, and during the afternoon, he had been drinking considerably. He went into a saloon at Alliance, and called for a drink. The saloon-keeper refused to give him any, saying that he had drunk enough. In the saloon, William Reynolds and Dr. Smith were sitting, and deceased insisted on having a fight with one or both of them; not for any assignable cause or provocation, save that quarrelsome disposition which liquor sometimes infuses.

Dr. Smith was a stranger, but Valleley wanted to whip [348]*348him, and the doctor describes the man as being “ not very drunk, but ugly, fighting drunk.”

At Alliance, he hired a horse and buggy, and took a drive. Upon coming back to the livery stable the owner claimed that the horse had been driven too hard, and that the consequences might be serious. Upon this Yalleley, in his slang phrase, wanted to “lick him.”

He took the cars about dusk. On the train he created serious disturbance. A witness describes him as on the platform between the cars, and swinging himsélf off, holding on to the iron railing, and out beyond the line of the train, in such a position that striking any object would probably have killed him. A brakeman interfered, and tried to pull him back to a place of safety. This occurred more than once, and there was a violent struggle between the brakeman and deceased, in the course of which they got inside the car. They struggled together over the seats. There was a scene of great confusion. Ladies endeavored to get away by climbing over the backs of the seats. The passengers interfered, and separated the combatants, and told the brakeman to go outside the car, as deceased appeared to have a violent antipathy against him. The brakeman complied, but coming back to get his hat, deceased jumped at him again. They clinched and went down upon a seat, where were a lady and child, and, as a passenger states it, “I thought they would mash the child.” Deceased was said to have been brandishing a knife, which he dropped upon the floor, and was hunting about to find. Passengers again interfered, and got the brakeman out upon the platform once more, shut and locked the door. Deceased tried to open it, and failing, began an assault upon one of the passengers.

The conductor came along about this time, and the passengers were clamoi-ous to have the rowdy put off". The conductor stepped up to him, and deceased threatened to shoot him. The train, however, was stopped, and the man expelled. No barm was done him in this. No violence was used, and only force enough to accomplish the end.

[349]*349Deceased was put off about eight or nine o’clock in the evening. The next morning he was found, about one-third of a mile from where he was put off, nearly dead, and in fact lived but a few moments after he was picked up. Though there is no direct testimony as to how he was killed, yet, as he was found near the track, badly bruised and mangled, it is assumed that he was run over and killed by another of the company’s trains ; and, for the purposes of this decision, that assumption may be regarded as the correct one.

Upon the first trial, the claim was that deceased was but slightly intoxicated, and so slightly that the company had no right to put him off. Upon this, the jury found for defendant. Whereupon, the petition was amended, and the case tried upon the theory that deceased was so much intoxicated that the company had no right to expel him ; that he was so very drunk as to be stupid, helpless,- and unable to take care of himself; and putting him off near the track, where he was likely to be run over, and was run over, the company was responsible, aud upon this a verdict of $600 was recovered.

It might, perhaps, as far as this case is concerned, be conceded that if a man were so intoxicated as to be without reason, sense, or intelligence, it would be unlawful, as it would be inhuman, to expel him from cars at night, where he would be just as likely as not to lie down upon the rails and go to sleep. We may concede further, that to put off a drunken man, during a bitterly cold night, in the woods, far from any house, when the probabilities were that he would freeze to death before help could reach him, would be as indefensibie in law as it would be wicked and cruel in fact. And, further, to put a man off, in a dark night, upon a high railroad bridge, or upon the brink of a precipice, where the first step would be destruction — this could find no justification in law. All this might possibly be. We suppose that the principles governing cases of this kind are not different from those which control the ordinary affairs of mankind. Rights and powers must be [350]*350reasonably exercised, under all circumstances of tbe ease. The conductor of a railroad train must use his best judgment and discretion. If he acts, not wantonly, not abusively, but with that prudence which the case demands, his employer can not be made responsible.

It is claimed that this man was so drunk as to be bereft of all intelligence, and that tbe conductor ought to have known that putting him off was equivalent to putting him to death ; that such was his condition, that expelling him, as was done, nothing was more likely than that he would wander along the track, and be killed, as he was, and therefore the death was the natural and proximate result of the expulsion. The flaw in this claim is, that it is not true that deceased was so drunk as to be bereft of intelligence. He was ugly, “ fighting drunk,” vicious, and illustrating the qualities of a reckless desperado, but he had quite sense enough to take care of himself. That there was no paralysis of his physical faculties is evident from the manner in which he handled the brakeman ; and although all the witnesses recognized the fact of his intoxication, not one of them supposed that he was unable to take care of himself. Those who speak of it all say the reverse.

The man, therefore, was- not helpless, nor stupid, and the conductor had no reason to think so. That it was not only his right, but his duty, under these circumstances, to 'put off a man furiously drunk, who, in a crowded car, with women and children, is fighting, flourishing a knife, and threatening to shoot, is evident upon the plainest principles of self-defense, if nothing else.

But, if the propriety of the expulsion were doubtful, either because deceased’s conduct did not justify it, or because his condition rendered it unsafe and dangex’ous in its consequences, still we must find that the death was the natural and proximate cause of the expulsion befox’e defendants can be made liable. How can this be said in the present case ? Admit that the vicinity of a railroad track is dangerous to passers by; admit that putting him off, as was done, was placing him in eii’cumstances of danger: [351]

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Bluebook (online)
32 Ohio St. (N.S.) 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/railway-co-v-valleley-ohio-1877.