Sowers v. Virginian Railway Co.

133 S.E. 325, 101 W. Va. 582, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 220
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 11, 1926
Docket5589
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 133 S.E. 325 (Sowers v. Virginian 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
Sowers v. Virginian Railway Co., 133 S.E. 325, 101 W. Va. 582, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 220 (W. Va. 1926).

Opinion

Woods, Judge:

This action was instituted by an administratrix to recover for the. wrongful death of her decedent while in the employment of defendant company. After all of the evidence, both for the plaintiff and defendant, was introduced, the court, on motion of defendant, instructed the jury to find for the de *584 fendant. Judgment was entered thereon, and plaintiff now prosecutes this writ of error.

A. W. Sowers, decedent, during his employment by the defendant company (which covered a period of three years) as a “pipe fitter”, was, in February, 1921, adjudged insane and committed to the asylum at Spencer. Three weeks later, or March 27, 1921, he was discharged as “cured” and returned home. He was taken back immediately into the employment of defendant company, and continued to work for it in their yards at Princeton until in July, 1922, when a strike of the shopmen was declared. He sought and found employment elsewhere. On the 14th of November, 1922, being then out of work, and realizing that he had a family and father to support, he went back to defendant’s shops to seek work. The strike was still in effect. He was employed, and on the following morning went to work. On Thursday, Friday and Saturday he continued to work at the shops with his usual skill and care. 'What happened in connection with his employment, in regard to his conduct, leading up to the time of his death, is told by Norris Perry, his helper, who testified for the plaintiff, as follows:

“Well, about one o’clock I saw Mr. Thomason, or just a little after twelve thirty. Mr. Thomason came to me and says ‘I have a baggage ear over there that I want as soon as we can get it, and Mr. Sowers is working on it to repair the steam line, and I want you to help him take out that line and put another in, and he says he seems melancholy, downcast, and I want you to endeavor to cheer him up’, and I went over there on this baggage-car track and Mr. Thomason came over there while we w;ere there and showed us what he wanted repaired, and we taken it off and taken it to the shop-
“Q. You say Mr. Thomason came over there. Was that the foreman?
“A. Yes sir, Mr. Thomason, the foreman, came over there and gave us instructions what he wanted done with it, and Mr. Sowers and myself taken it off and taken it to the shop and we taken the old pipe and used it as a pattern and measured it and *585 cut a piece of pipe the right length and threaded it at each end and put it in the fire and bent it to conform, to the alignment of the ear, and that took up about an hour of our time, and that was about two o’clock then, or two thirty, I don’t know exactly how much time it taken us, but a good bit of time, and in a few minutes Mr. Sowers asked me had any of the strikers ever said anything to me about working down there, and I said ‘Yes sir, but I don’t pay any attention to any such thing as that’. And he says ‘Well, they are always talking to me trying to make me quit work, or trying to get me to quit’, he says ‘I don’t know what to do about it,’ he says ‘I am worried’, and he was standing there he says ‘They are always after me about it’, and he was standing there and he laid down or threw himself across one of the benches and he said ‘ God help me if I' am a sinner ’, he was rather much of a Christian and Christian man, and he couldn’t bear the thought, I guess, of them telling him he was a sinner, and he got up and said ‘ They have persecuted me worse than Jesus Christ.’ I don’t know what he meant but those were his words, and I had some fruit, an apple there, and I gave him one knowing he was fond of fruit, and he stepped out and said ‘I will be back in a little while’. He said he was going to the toilet * * * two hundred feet away and he left, and in about fifteen minutes, I will say, I guess that was about the length of time, he didn’t come back and I thought he — I said to Mr. Thomason, he just came in the shop, and I said ‘Have you seen Mr. Sowers?’ and he says ‘Where is he at?’ and I said ‘I don’t know’, and he said ‘You hurry up and find him, we have'got to finish that work, yon go find him’.”

Perry went in search of him and found him dead in an entirely different part of the yard, a quarter of a mile away, where he had no business. The cause of his death is left to conjecture. Supposedly, he was struck by a switching engine, although no one knows just how the accident happened. The foregoing evidence was all of the plaintiff’s case relied upon to charge the defendant foreman with sufficient knowledge to put him upon inquiry as to the mental condition of the servant.

*586 Upon the question of whether Sowers was insane, a number of plaintiff’s- witnesses testify to the fact that deceased was deeply religious; that he took an active part in church work; and that he had a great desire to be held in esteem by his fellow men. On the night of the 14th of November (a few hours after his employment) certain agents of the striking shopmen visited Sowers to question him concerning’ his intention to return to work. Some of these visitors were also fellow churchmen. They testify that Sowers seemed excited. One of the brethren arose in prayer meeting on Wednesday evening (November 15th) and denounced deceased for going back to work, but admonished his auditors not to hold it against him as he was not responsible. Others stated that Sowers had a peculiar glare in his eyes like he was looking at nothing.

At Sunday School, two days prior to resuming said employment, while the pastor was talking, deceased arose uninvited and read a paper on some religious topic which he had prepared. A fellow workman saw him the day before he was killed and on asking him if he had returned to work, received the reply that he had come back “to make a few million”, and that during said reply Sowers commenced “sort of dancing”. Sowers’ wife testified that he had another “spell” in June, 1922. This spell she states was so slight that it was not noticeable to his own people. The only treatment administered was given him by his wife, acting upon advice received by letter from Dr. ITolroyd, superintendent of the asylum. This treatment consisted" of giving him employment to occupy' his mind, such as inducing him to walk around the town. No medicines were given. Employment was the cure according to the asylum physician for his kind of insanity. She said that for the first day he went back to work during the strike at his old employment he was buoyant and cheerful; that he later became depressed and laid and cried and laughed all of Thursday and Friday nights. On Saturday morning she. went to the ’phone and called for Mr. Thomason, and he was not there just at that time, and she told the employee answering the ’phone that she would call *587 later. She said that she intended to tell him of her husband’s condition and ask him to look after him and send him home. She did not later communicate with either Mr. Thomason or to any one else representing defendant company. It is significant that not one of these witnesses, although knowing of Sowers re-employment in the shops, conveyed information of the facts to which he testified, to the defendant or its agents.

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Bluebook (online)
133 S.E. 325, 101 W. Va. 582, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sowers-v-virginian-railway-co-wva-1926.