Shaffer v. Western Maryland Railway Co.

116 S.E. 747, 93 W. Va. 300, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 51
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 13, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 116 S.E. 747 (Shaffer v. Western Maryland Railway 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
Shaffer v. Western Maryland Railway Co., 116 S.E. 747, 93 W. Va. 300, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 51 (W. Va. 1923).

Opinion

MeRedith, Judge ;

Plaintiff, as an employee of defendant, recovered a judgment of $5000 for personal injuries received in service, and defendant assigns error.

There are three counts in the declaration. The first is based on defendant’s common law liability for negligence. [302]*302The second is based on defendant’s liability under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act. Tbe third, introduced by way of amendment, is an elaboration of the matters alleged in the second. Defendant’s demurrer to the original declaration and each count was overruled and likewise its (demurrer to the declaration and each count as amended.

Before taking up the assignments of éfror we will briefly state the facts. Defendant operates an interstate railway from Elkins, West Virginia, to Baltimore, Maryland, passing through various towns in this state, Thomas, Wilson, Dobbin, and Bayard. Near Bayard it crosses the north branch of the .Potomac River in Maryland, but a short distance beyond that point it re-crosses the river into West Virginia. At Bayard, on the West Virginia side, a spur track, .called the Buffalo Branch, extends a mile and a half or two miles to the mines of the Emmons Coal Company. It is used in carrying coal from the mine both in intrastate. and interstate commerce. Defendant, according to the testimony of James Strachan, the coal company’s superintendent, owns the spur track, though it appears that cars are received by the coal company from the ráilivay at Bayard Siding and hauled up to the mine and back by the coal company’s engine. On the day the accident' occurred, a steel hopper ivas derailed on the spur track. Plaintiff, with Frank Cosner, and others, ivas directed to go by passenger train from Thomas, where he ivas employed by defendant, as a car-repairer, to re-rail the car. This they did, the work being completed about 11:30' in the morning. Just how long they were so engaged does not appear, but probably not more than three hours. The derailed car had been loaded with refuse -from the mine and the refuse was being- carried down to Bayard for use on its streets. Defendant had arranged for William Faulk, its section foreman, to meet plaintiff and his fellow-workmen, at Bayard, on completion of their work of replacing the car, so that he might carry them on a railway gasoline motor car back to Thomas. .They boarded the motor and while passing through the village of Wilson at a rate of from fifteen to twenty miles per hou'r, the motor ran into a board extending across the track, and plaintiff ivas thrown off; a [303]*303250-pound jack, one of the tools they had been using, fell from the motor upon plaintiff, mashing' and breaking his leg. There is no question as to the extent of his injuries. The board was about a foot wide, probably an inch and a half thick, fourteen feet long, and was in place about a foot above the track. It had been placed there by Shoemaker, a merchant, who wheeled his freight from the slag' platform on the opposite side of the railroad over to his store. Defendant maintains a flag station at Wilson, but there is no station building there, either for freight or passengers. It is clearly shown that Shoemaker had for some years' been in the habit of placing the board across the track for that purpose; the former owner of the store had done likewise. No one on the part of defendant appears to have raised any objection to this practice, though it was known to its) section-foreman. Tt does appear, however, that it was contrary to the defendant’s rules issued to those higher up, but notice never got down to those in immediate charge. It also appears that Shoemaker sometimes handled freight for other parties in the same way, and that on one or more occasions another person had used the board for a like purpose. That iff was • a dangerous practice goes without saying.

As already stated, plaintiff declared on defendant’s liability for negligence, both at common law and under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act. Defendant’s main reliance here is upon its demurrer to plaintiff’s declaration for misjoinder of counts. No objection’ is urged to the counts taken separately, but it is strenuously argued that a count showing liability at common law and a count showing liability under the statute cau not be joined in the same declaration. That the cause of action arising under the common law (or state statute in case of wrongful death) is wholly different, separate and distinct from the cause of action arising under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act is quite clear and has been so stated by this court in Findley v. Coal & Coke Ry. Co., 76 W. Va. 747, 87 S. E. 198. Counsel for defendant argue that we virtually held in that case that the two causes of action could not be declared on in separate counts in the same declaration, but we did not so hold, nor is anything stated [304]*304in the opinion from which such a conclnsion can reasonably be drawn. That case was here twice. The first time, reported in 72 W. Va. 268, 78 S. E. 396, the writ of error was obtained by the plaintiff, because the trial court had erroneously directed a verdict for the defendant, and for errors committed on the trial. The declaration at that time was based on defendant’s liability for decedent’s wrongful death under our state statute. Defendant introduced no evidence on the first trial, but rested content on its motion to strike out plaintiff’s evidence, and for a directed verdict. Its motion prevailed, hence its real defense was not disclosed. At the second trial, defendant pleaded that plaintiff’s action was barred by the two-year statute of limitations, Barnes’ Federal Code, §8074, and during the progress of the trial it showed that at the time decedent was killed he was employed by defendant in interstate commerce. Thereupon, over defendant’s objection, plaintiff was permitted to amend his declaration so as to claim a right of recovery under the Federal Act. On writ of error here on behalf of defendant, 76 W. Va. 747, 87 S. E. 198, we held that this amendment introduced a new and different cause of action, struck out the amendment, and remanded the case for a new trial on the original declaration. This in fact amounted to a denial of any relief to plaintiff; but Judge Poffenbarger, who wrote the second opinion, was careful not to say that the two causes of action might not be declared on in separate counts. He did say, however, that if the original declaration declares on but one, for instance, the right under the state law, then the other may not be introduced by way of amendment after appearance by the defendant, and over defendant’s objection. The case goes that 'far, but no farther.

Two cases in this court growing out of the same accident clearly illustrate the importance of the question under discussion. In 1912 Jones and Easter, railroad employees who were returning to their homes from a trip in interstate commerce, while crossing the railroad yards at Bluefield were run down by a backing engine. Jones was killed and Easter was injured. Jones’s administrator sued the railroad company, alleged liability under the state statutes and recovered judgment. This court reversed the judgment because of [305]*305decedent’s contributory negligence, and lack of proof of negligence on the part of defendant. Jones v. Virginian Ry. Co., 74 W. Va. 666, 83 S. E. 54. Easter also sued, basing his right of recovery in his first and second counts upon defendant’s common law liability for negligence, but in his third count basing it on its liability under the Federal statute. This court sustained a judgment in his favor, Easter v. Virginian Ry. Co., 76 W. Va.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 S.E. 747, 93 W. Va. 300, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaffer-v-western-maryland-railway-co-wva-1923.