Tennent v. Southern Railway Co.

161 S.E. 860, 164 S.C. 28, 1931 S.C. LEXIS 244
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 29, 1931
Docket13311
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 161 S.E. 860 (Tennent v. Southern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tennent v. Southern Railway Co., 161 S.E. 860, 164 S.C. 28, 1931 S.C. LEXIS 244 (S.C. 1931).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Cothran.

These two cases arose out of the same accident and were tried together on Circuit and in this Court. An automobile driven by E. S. Tennent, Jr., son of E. S. Tennent, Sr., who owned it, went into a railroad cut, under circumstances *30 which will be detailed, causing damage to the car, and personal injury to the driver. The owner brought suit on account of the damage to the car and the driver, on account of the injury he sustained.

The cases were tried before his Honor, Judge Johnson, and a jury, the trial resulting in a verdict in favor of the son for $1,750.00, and a verdict in favor of the defendants in the case of the father. The father made a motion for a new trial in his case which was granted, and the defendants, in the case of the son, which was refused. The defendants have appealed from the order granting a new trial in the case of the father, and from the judgment entered upon the verdict in the case of the son.

The facts appear to be as follows :

About three miles southeast of Blacksburg, on the railroad which runs from that point by York, Rock Hill, Lancaster, and other points, there was a cut of considerable depth and length; it was spanned by a bridge, a part of the state highway which runs practically parallel with the railroad; in approaching this bridge, the highway made quite an abrupt turn to the right, some 40 feet from the bridge; it appeared expedient to the state highway commission, in making quite a change in the highway, not to follow the old road from the point of the abrupt turn, but to cross it and follow practically a straight line to the railroad cut, some 30 feet or more south of the location of the old bridge. The Railroad Commission on July 18, 1923, passed an order requiring the railway company to construct a new bridge at the new point at which the changed highway reached the railroad cut, and that the cost be apportioned share and share alike, between the railroad company and Cherokee County.

Litigation then ensued between the railroad company and the Railroad Commission; the railroad company contending that the order was a confiscation of its property. This litigation was settled by a consent order signed by his Honor, Judge Memminger, on November 20, 1924, directing the *31 railroad company, upon the payment to 'it of $1,500.00 by Cherokee County, to construct the bridge, commencing at once and proceeding with reasonable dispatch.

It appears that in the meantime, that is, between the order of Judge Memminger and the construction of the bridge by the railroad company, the State Highway Commission had proceeded with the extension of the relocated highway from the abrupt curve to the right of the old highway up to the railroad cut about 40 feet, and on the other side of the cut towards Blacksburg, and had erected barriers at the points of divergence on both sides of the railroad cut; detour notices were erected by the highway commission on both sides. Pending the construction of the new bridge, the traveling public continued to use the old bridge with its approaches on both sides.

It appears that on April 19, Í925, E. S. Tennent, Jr., driving his father’s car, left Spartanburg in the afternoon (Sunday) with certain companions, a lady and two gentlemen. Passing through Thickety between Spartanburg and Blacksburg, they were arrested for speeding at the rate of 50 miles per hour. Tennent paid a fine of $10.00, and warned the officers to watch out for him coming back that night. The party returned from Rock Hill about 10:20 that night. At York, the party of joy riders had a round with a policeman by suddenly backing the car towards him at about 40 miles an hour. Before reaching York, at Rock Hill, they pulled up certain parking signs; they left York in a roar at 50 or 60 miles an hour with Policeman Boyd chasing them in a Eord car, unable to overtake them! At Bethesda Cemetery, between York and the scene of the accident, they picked up a tombstone which had been erected at the grave of W. N. Neal the year before. About a mile from the scene of the accident, C. W. Wannamaker came upon the party just getting into the car after repairing a tire. Three-quarters of a mile from the bridge the party sped past Wannamaker going about 60 miles per hour. When they reached the *32 abrupt curve in the'road leading to the old bridge, Tennent, who was familiar with the location, realized that he could not go straight on but had to turn into the old road. In an effort to make the turn at the sharp righthand curve 40 feet ■from the old bridge, he applied the brakes and cut his car so sharply to the right that his wheel skidded, carrying his car straight away along the new extension, which the highway department had built and was maintaining, over the barriers and into the cut at the point where the new bridge was subsequently erected. The crash from the impact awoke a lady, Mrs. Camp, who was in her home nearby.

It appears to have been the young man’s habit to drive at a high, reckless, and unlawful rate of speed; he held the record for violations of the speed laws in his home town. Just ten days before the accident he was fined $10.00 for speeding SO miles an hour on Main Street in Spartanburg. Two months after the accident he was arrested and fined for speeding. On King Street in the City of Charleston, prior to the accident, he turned a right-hand corner, applied his brakes, cutting his wheels to the right and skidding.

The evidence is not controverted by the young man, and from it we do not see how any other reasonable inference can be drawn than that the catastrophe was the result of his reckless conduct; there is not recorded in the book of time, a wilder ride.

It appears that the relocation of the highway was made some months before the bridge was constructed. The relocation was under the exclusive maintenance of the highway commission which had directed the placing of barriers on both sides of the cut; the one on the York side being about five feet from the abrupt curve. It does not appear therefore that that portion of the extension between the abrupt curve and the edge of the cut had ever come under the control of the railroad company, or that it was in anywise responsible for its maintenance. As a matter of fact, it appears that the edge of the cut was just within the right of way of the rail *33 road company; it having at that point a right of way of only 30 feet from the center of the track,- and that it was 60 feet from the edge of the cut on one side to the edge of the cut on the other.

Judging by the allegations of the complaint, it seems that the counsel for the plaintiffs are confused in the place of the accident, apparently apprehending that it occurred at the end of the old bridge, by reason of insufficient guardwings, as will appear by a reading of the complaint set forth in the reply brief of the appellants, which is too voluminous to be repeated here; the same confusion appears in the testimony of the plaintiff’s witness Bourne.

The young man admitted that he was driving 30 or 35 miles an hour approaching the abrupt curve.

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Bluebook (online)
161 S.E. 860, 164 S.C. 28, 1931 S.C. LEXIS 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tennent-v-southern-railway-co-sc-1931.