Raines v. Chesapeake & O. R'y Co.

24 L.R.A. 226, 19 S.E. 565, 39 W. Va. 50, 1894 W. Va. LEXIS 33
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 24 L.R.A. 226 (Raines v. Chesapeake & O. 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
Raines v. Chesapeake & O. R'y Co., 24 L.R.A. 226, 19 S.E. 565, 39 W. Va. 50, 1894 W. Va. LEXIS 33 (W. Va. 1894).

Opinions

Holt, Judge:

1. This is an action of trespass on the case, brought in the Circuit Court of Kanawha county in February, 1892, by Maggie Raines, administratrix, against the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Company for negligently .causing the death of her husband and intestate, John B. Raines, which suit resulted in a judgment for defendant, from which she has obtained this writ of error.

The declaration contains two counts,both good; and the demurrer of defendant was therefore properly overruled. The issue was joined on the plea of not guilty. A jury was impanelled and sworn, and having heard the evidence of plaintiff in full the court on motion of defendant struck out plaintiff’s evidence; and the jury by direction of the court returned a verdict for defendant. The plaintiff excepted to the ruling of the court excluding her evidence and moved the court to set aside the verdict and grant her a new trial; but the court overruled the motion and gave judgment and certified the evidence, as required by our present statute. Code 1891, p. 834, c. 131. s. 9.

Seven witnesses were examined on behalf of plaintiff, none for defendant, and the facts are, in substance, as follows:

The town of Montgomery, where the accident happened, contains from one thousand five hundred to two thousand people; is about one mile long on each side of defendant’s railway, where the company has a station, a yard for storing cars and five tracks running from the station west to the lower end of the town, with spaces between wide enough to put a footman out of danger, and a county road running along nearby on either side — the one on the south side at a distance of about one hundred and fifty yards. The one on the north side of the tracks is quite close, and is the main street of the town, being about fifty feet from the track, where Raines was killed. The track is straight there, and the footman on it could be seen for a long distance by the train going east. No houses were near the [55]*55track where Raines was killed. Adjoining the town above and below are the coal valley, and coal mines; and for some fifteen years or more footmen have been accustomed to use the track and travel along it without objection, it being often thus used in dry weather as well as when it is muddy.

On September 25,1891, about five o’clock in the evening, Eo. 2, the east-bound passenger mail train, with four or five carsbeing on schedule time and running at its usual speed— at about twenty miles per hour at that point' — -came in sight and hearing at the lower or west end of the town, blowing one prolonged whistle for the crossing, and one for the station. As it entered the railway yard at the west end, the steam was shut off, and it ran on at a speed of fifteen or twenty miles per hour by its previous momentum.

Raines, the decedent, was walking slowly on the main track in the railway yard about two hundred yards east of the lower or western limit of the town, and four hundred or five hundred yards west of the station, about six hundred yards above Morris creek bridge, two hundred yards above a crossing at the lower end of the town^with _hig..baek to-' wards the coming train, usd á paper in bis hand, as though he were reading or looking at it. When the coming train got within twenty or thirty feet, or some other short dis- ■ tance, the ’engineer blew the alarm — four or five quick whistles — put on brakes and steam, reversed the engine, and at once did all he could to save him. “The engine Checked considerably,” but passed on about a length of the ■'train before stopping hut struck and killed Raines, who was walking in front towards the depot.

“The fact, that pedestrains are accustomed to travel on a railroad track at a particular place makes it the duty of the servants of the company to exercise greater caution and prudence in the operation of its road at that place.” Nuzum v. Railway Co., 30 W. Va. 228 (4 S. E. 242.) This point of law arose out of the following facts: The servants of a railway company having in charge one of its engines and trains running within the corporate limits of Wheeling, to and over a public wharf therein, failed or neglected to give notice, at least sixty rods before its approach to the [56]*56wharf, by ringing the hell or blowing the whistle of the locomotive for a sufficient time to give notice of its approach thereto. It was in fact what is called, a “flying switch” of the freight train, which ran down and killed the deceased on the track. And the court in the same case further holds: “If such company permit a train of its cars to be moved at that place without having some of its servants in position to give warning of its approach and to control its movements, these facts are of themselves acts of negligence.” Id. “A person using a railway track as a footpath for his own convenience elsewhere than at a lawful crossing, and is injured while so doing, can not recover damages of the railway company unless it be guilty of wanton or gross negligence.” Spicer v. Railway Co., 34 W. Va. 514 (12 S. E. Rep. 553).

A railway company running its train is bound for the safety of such.train to keep a reasonable lookout for trespassers on its track, and is bound to exercise such care, as the circumstances .require, to prevent injury to such trespasser; but, having given the signal required by law, it has "a fighVto-pr^SUmeJdiat thg. trespasser, if apparantly a capable person, will use his seuses anti seasonably remove himself from danger — that he can and will protect himself— so it need not diminish its lawful speed, and if the employes of the company omit no duty after becoming aware of his peril the company will not be responsible for a resulting injury ; but if the employes know him to be deaf or helplessly drunk or otherwise specially in danger, or if the person be a child too young to appreciate or avoid the danger, if they then neglect to give a reasonable warning, and keep on and inflict damage, the company will be responsible for an injury to such trespasser if it be guilty of willful or wanton or gross negligence. See Spicer v. Railway Co., 34 W. Va. 514 (12 S. E. Rep. 553;) Bish. Non-Cont. Law, § 1037; Railroad Co. v. Sherman, 30 Gratt. 602-629; Railroad Co v. Harman’s Adm’r, 83 Va. 554 (8 S. E. Rep. 251) citing with approval 2 Wood, Ry. Law, 1267. See 2 Wood, R. R. Minor’s Ed. 1894) § 320.

Trespassers on railroad tracks are of various kinds differing in the character of the trespasser, as one having his [57]*57full senses, one deaf or blind; differing in intent, as intentional or accidental; differing in place or in time or in other material circumstances, as being at a remóte place where the trespass is not to be anticipated, or in cities or towns or at other thronged places, where they occur as of course, sometimes under allurements which the road itself has held out, or with its silence, amounting to a quasi consent, if the trespasser is willing to take the risks, but creating no right in the public to so use it, and creating thereby no obligation of special care or protection other than what the special circumstances may require.

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Bluebook (online)
24 L.R.A. 226, 19 S.E. 565, 39 W. Va. 50, 1894 W. Va. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raines-v-chesapeake-o-ry-co-wva-1894.