State v. Irvine

52 So. 567, 126 La. 434, 1910 La. LEXIS 671
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 23, 1910
DocketNo. 18,150
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 52 So. 567 (State v. Irvine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Irvine, 52 So. 567, 126 La. 434, 1910 La. LEXIS 671 (La. 1910).

Opinion

PROVOSTY, J.

The defendants, Irvine and Madox, were tried together for manslaughter. Madox was acquitted. Irvine [437]*437was convicted, and was sentenced to five years at hard labor; and lie lias apxiealed.

1-Ie was foreman, and Madox was engineer, of a switch engine which between 11 and 12 o’clock at night had moved a Pullman coach to a side track at the passenger railroad depot in the city of Shreveport, and left the coach in position, and was returning to the roundhouse when it came in collision with a passenger train, whereby several persons were killed. The cause of the accident was that, instead of taking the outgoing track for returning to the roundhouse, the engine took the incoming track. It seems that when the engine reached the switch for transferring to the outgoing track, the switch-man announced that it was “spiked,” or, in other words, had been nailed up and put out of service, and that the engineer, without consulting Irvine, took the incoming track, in violation, as he knew, of the rules of the company. Irvine was at the back end of the engine, standing on the footboard. They had gone a little over a quarter of a mile, perhaps half a mile, on this wrong track, when the collision occurred. The engine was moving at five or six miles an hour. The crew jumped off, except the engineer, who set about reversing his engine, and was at his post when the impact came. Those of the crew who survived testified that they knew they were on the wrong track, except Irvine, who testified that he became aware of their being on the wrong track only just before the collision, too late to remedy the situation.

The case is before this court on several bills of exceptions to certain parts of the charge of the court, and to the refusal to give certain special charges.

There could be, and there was, no dispute as to the fact of the collision and of several persons having been killed by it, and of its having happened because the incoming train had no reason to know, or suspect, the presence of the switch engine on this track; and the bills raise no question in those connections.

It will conduce to brevity if, before undertaking to discuss the bills, we come to a definite and clear notion of the law applicable to the disputed points. It is that if the going upon this incoming track was against the rules of the company, and if it was defendant’s duty as foreman to know this, and to see to it that such a thing did not happen, defendant is guilty even if he did not know that the engine was on this wrong track; because, where one is charged with a special duty the nonperformance of which involves danger to the safety of others, the failure to perform the duty even through inattention is gross and culpable, or, in other words, criminal, negligence. On the other hand, though the track was the wrong one for the engine to be on, and defendant knew it, he is not guilty, if he was not charged with a special duty in the premises; and, even though charged with a special duty in the premises, still he is not guilty if in going upon this wrong track he did so, not through negligence, but merely through error of judgment.

In support of the proposition that defendant’s ignorance of the engine’s being upon the wrong track will not exculpate him if as foreman he was charged with the special duty of taking care that it should not go there, we will cite the following:

“Every negligent omission of a legal duty whereby death. ensues is indictable either as murder or manslaughter. If a man, says Arch-bold, take upon himself an office or duty requiring skill or care, if, by his ignorance, carelessness, or negligence, he cause the death of another, he will be guilty of manslaughter.” Bishop, Grim. L. (6th Ed.) § 314, p. 178.
“Omissions are not the basis of penal action, unless they constitute a defect in the discharge of a responsibility with which the defendant is especially invested, though in such cases they may constitute indictable offenses. * * * When a responsibility specially imposed upon the defendant is such that an omission in its performance is, in the usual course of events, followed by an injury to another person or to [439]*439the state, then the defendant is indictable for such an omission. If the duty is absolute, then defendant is responsible for its nonperformance.” I Wharton on Crim. (9th Ed.) § 130, p. 157.
“We have already seen that an omission is not the basis of penal action unless it constitute a defect in the discharge of a responsibility specially imposed. And the converse is true that, when a lawful duty is imposed upon a party, then an omission on his part in the discharge of such duty, when acting injuriously on the party to whom the duty is owed, is an indictable offense.” Id. § 329, p. 355.

From note 61 L. R. A. 277, we take the following:

“Every negligent omission of a legal duty, whereby death ensues, is indictable either as murder or manslaughter.”
“Where death is the direct and immediate result of the omission of a party to perform a plain duty imposed upon him by law or contract, he is guilty of a felonious homicide.”

The charge of the learned judge a quo was as follows:

“Gentlemen of the Jury:
“(1) The two defendants in this case, Irvine and Madox, are charged in the state’s indictment with the crime of manslaughter, a crime defined by the law as the unlawful killing of a human being without malice.
“(2) The state charges that these defendants while in charge of a locomotive switch or yard engine, in the service of the Kansas City Southern Railroad Company, and operating the same on the railroad ¿yards in the city of Shreveport, collided their engine with a passenger train of the Texas & Pacific Railway Company while on the railroad yard in the city of Shreveport as it was backing into the Union Depot, and by said collision caused the death of the three pereons named in the indictment.
“(3) In your investigation I charge you to bear in mind that these defendants are presumed to be innocent until the state overcomes that presumption by evidence establishing their guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. The defendants are not required to establish their innocence. The state must establish their guilt to that degree of certainty that leaves no reasonable doubt in the minds of the jury as to their guilt. A reasonable doubt is one contradistinguished from a mere conjectural doubt. It is a doubt for which some reason can be given, and must be raised on the evidence or some lack of evidence.
“'(4) You will naturally and logically first inquire as to- the death of one or more of the three persons alleged to have been killed. When you are satisfied as to that fact, you will next inquire and satisfy yourselves that they came to their death by reason of the alleged collision. Being satisfied that one or more of the alleged decedents came to their death by reason of said collision, you will next inquire was this collision simply a misadventure, or was it the result of criminal recklessness or carelessness of some person or persons charged with the handling or operating of one or both of the colliding trains.

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Bluebook (online)
52 So. 567, 126 La. 434, 1910 La. LEXIS 671, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-irvine-la-1910.