Thompson v. Monongahela Railway Co.

128 S.E. 110, 99 W. Va. 207, 42 A.L.R. 159, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 135
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 19, 1925
Docket5252
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 128 S.E. 110 (Thompson v. Monongahela 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
Thompson v. Monongahela Railway Co., 128 S.E. 110, 99 W. Va. 207, 42 A.L.R. 159, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 135 (W. Va. 1925).

Opinion

Miller, Judge:

In the same action for personal injuries the plaintiff obtained a verdict and judgment for $5,000.00 against the defendant railway company, and $300.00 against the defendant Adam Ware, to w'hich judgment against the railway company we granted a writ of error on the petition of the company. Ware, the-other defendant, did not join therein, and is not here complaining of the judgment against him.

The injury complained of consisted of a wound, cut, bruise and laceration, on or near plaintiff’s temple, over her right eye, alleged to have greatly injured the nerves and muscles of her face, from which cause she alleges she suffered great pain and endured mental anguish and became sick and sore and disabled from thence hitherto, and has been prevented from performing her usual duties as housewife and housekeeper, and whereby she also alleges the nerves located in the region of said wound were injuriously affected, her eyesight impaired, and that the nerves leading to her teeth were also greatly impaired, so that it became necessary for her to have her teeth extracted, and from which she suffered great pain and mental anguish, and from which she has become inflicted with chronic neuralgia in various parts of her body, and whereby also the “cranial nerve or nerve centers” has become.injured and destroyed.

These injuries, the declaration alleges, were sustained by plaintiff, on April 23, 1922, while a passenger for hire on defendant’s railway train between Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and Fairmont, West Virginia, by being struck on the head by a tin collapsible drinking cup which the defendant company negligently suffered and permitted the defendant Adam Ware, another passenger on the same car, to throw over, *209 through, and across the car in which he and she with others were passengers, while he, the said Ware, with other passengers, without restraint of the defendant, were engaged in said car, in the disorderly conduct' of throwing -missiles of various kinds through and across the same, in the presence and view of the officers in charge of the defendant’s train.

The train in question was a regular passenger train, operated between Fairmont, West Virginia, and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; but on the Sunday in question, the defendant sold tickets for that train between Fairmont and intermediate points .to Pittsburgh and return at reduced rates, and the evidence shows that many persons, including plaintiff, her son and daughter, and the defendant Ware, took advantage of 'the low rates to visit the city of Pittsburgh. The defendant company’s road ended at Brownsville, Pennsylvania, where it connected with the Pittsburgh and Lake Erie road, and where the crew of the defendant company delivered the train to the crew of the connecting carrier, and where on the return trip the train was redelivered to the defendant company and its trainmen, and the journey completed while it was under the control and management of the defendant and its agents. The.accident in question occurred on the return trip, about twenty-five minutes after the train left Brownsville, and after the defendant by its trainmen had taken charge of the train to complete the journey.

The defendant railway company’s plea was not guilty. The evidence, shows that the alleged disorderly conduct began in the third or ladies’ day coach, and between the passengers in the front end of the car, soon after the train left Pittsburgh, about 5:30 P. M., and continued intermittently all the way to Brownsville. The court, however, struck out all the evidence of such disorderly conduct occurring prior to the delivery of the train to the defendant at Brownsville, evidently on the ground that plaintiff sustained no injury therefrom and made no complaint.thereof, and that defendant and its agents had no knowledge thereof, and were not charged with any responsibility therefor. The testimony shows that passengers in the front end of the car in which plaintiff was *210 riding were acquainted with, one another and were enjoying a good time together, and were engaged in the amusement of throwing at one another paper wads, paper drinking cups, and banana and orange peelings, made up from their lunch baskets or boxes, and of which there does not seem to have been any complaint by any of the passengers. It does not appear, however, that plaintiff had participated in this amusement, but she admitted she made no complaint at any time to anyone, either trainman or passenger, and when after the accident, on learning that the defendant Ware had thrown the drinking cup that caused her injury, she requested that he be not arrested but permitted to go home, as the throwing of the cup was accidental on his part. The evidence also shows that the trainmen, after the accident, took charge of plaintiff and conducted her to the parlor car, where she was given the best of attention possible until the train reached Morgantown, where one of the defendant company’s surgeons, summoned by the conductor, came aboard and dressed her wound, and took her on to Fairmont, where she was met also by another surgeon, and taken to a hospital, cared for and treated until returned to her home the next day by representatives of the railroad company; and no complaint seems to have been made against the defendant until just before the end of the year after the accident, when the present suit was brought with the purpose alleged.

The only notice imputed to the defendant company or any of its officers of the alleged misconduct which it is alleged resulted in plaintiff’s injuries, so far as the evidence shows, is that the conductor of the train, after leaving Brownsville, on the return trip, and after reaching the car in which plaintiff was, observed some of the passengers, in the front end of the car engaged in passing paper wads at one another. It is conceded that he promptly ordered them to desist; and he says that they did so, so long at least as he was in the car; and the brakeman and flagman gave similar testimony. George Vickers, flagman and brakeman, says that on leaving Brownsville he and Kinsel, the front brakeman, walked through the car in which plaintiff was riding; that they found the passengers sitting there laughing and joking, but *211 that they did not at any time see anyone throwing paper wads through, the ear; that they went on through, and he called the nest station, Maxwell, and on reaching there assisted the passengers in getting off at that point; that when he called the station none of the passengers said anything so far as he heard; that after leaving Maxwell he went back through the car and called the next station, East Millsboro, and observed nothing out of the ordinary going on; that the passengers were sitting there eating, and that there was some paper on the floor, which was usual on a through train; that on coming back to this car he did observe some throwing of paper wads in the front of the coach, and requested those engaged to “cut it out before somebody got into trouble,” and that they did quit; that he then went into the next coach ahead, and on returning to the car in which plaintiff was riding, and when about half way through the car, some one came to him and said: “A lady was hit back there”; that he then went on back, and he and Kinsel assisted Mrs. Thompson to the chair car, where the trainmen, the porter and Kinsel rendered her all the aid they could.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
128 S.E. 110, 99 W. Va. 207, 42 A.L.R. 159, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-monongahela-railway-co-wva-1925.