Thompson v. Norfolk & Western Railway Co.

182 S.E. 880, 116 W. Va. 705, 1935 W. Va. LEXIS 161
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 10, 1935
Docket8217
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 182 S.E. 880 (Thompson v. Norfolk & Western 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. Norfolk & Western Railway Co., 182 S.E. 880, 116 W. Va. 705, 1935 W. Va. LEXIS 161 (W. Va. 1935).

Opinion

Maxwell, Judge :

The Norfolk & Western Railway Company and John Sutfin, *707 one of its special police .officers, appointed by the Governor under authority of statute (Code 1931, 61-3-41), prosecute error to a judgment against them on verdict for $3,500.00 in the circuit court of Mingo County.

The plaintiff was shot and seriously injured between knee and ankle of the right leg as he was fleeing from arrest at the site of a moonshine still in said county. Three peace officers participated in the raid, to-wit, John Sutfin, W. R. Sutherland, who is likewise a special officer of the railway company and a defendant to this action, and Corporal R. C. Dilley, a state policeman.

Within a period of months, a large number of oil-containing steel drums of the railway company had been stolen from its right of way. Of that number, several were taken within a few days prior to the 29th of August, 1934. A superior officer of Sutfin’s in the railway service directed him to investigate the matter. Sutfin went from his home at Kenova in Wayne County to Williamson in Mingo County and got in touch with Corporal Dilley who, together with two other state policemen, were on duty there. The matter was discussed and the sheriff of the county was called into the conference. It was suspected that the missing oil drums were being used by moonshiners in the Burning Creek section of said county.

On the following morning, August 29, 1934, in pursuance of said conference, the two railway police officers, Corporal Dilley accompanied by two troopers, and four deputy sheriffs proceeded together to the above stated community where they separated into three squads, one of which, composed of Sutfin, Sutherland and Dilley, went up Upper Burning Creek. After traveling about three miles in their automobile they left it and continued on foot. Within a short distance they detected the odor of wood smoke and of mash. Presently they came in sight of two stills, the lower one idle but the upper one, about fifty feet from the first, was in operation and attended by two men who took alarm and fled. One of them, name unknown to the officers, escaped; the other was the plaintiff, whose identity was likewise unknown until after he was taken into custody. As he started to run, at a distance of about 50 or 60 feet from the officers, he was commanded to halt but paid no *708 heed. Each of the railway police officers fired twice, Sutfin with a rifle and Sutherland with a revolver. The three officers testified that after the shots were fired, plaintiff disappeared around a turn in the little stream on which the stills were located, apparently uninjured, but that in a moment he called to them that he had been shot; that when plaintiff disappeared from their view he was still running fast; that with the injury from which they found him suffering when they went to him he could not have run from the bend in the stream to that point, therefore, they had not shot him; and that two other shots were fired by an unknown person in the vicinity. The plaintiff testified that instantly before he was shot he looked back and observed Sutfin with his rifle leveled at him, also that Dilley was in the uniform of a state policeman.

On behalf of the defendants, it is urged that the evidence does not sustain the theory that either Sutfin or Sutherland shot the plaintiff, and that in no event is there liability upon any of the defendants because the officers, in the discharge of their duty, were endeavoring to arrest a fleeing felon and did not use unreasonable force.

We are at a loss to determine from the record the basis on which the jury could say with any degree of certainty that it was Sutfin who shot the plaintiff. Corporal Dilley, called as a witness for the plaintiff, testified, as did Sutfin and Sutherland, that he saw the plaintiff running after the firing had ceased; that he was found wounded, and prone on the ground, 25 to 45 feet from where he disappeared from view; that his wound was so severe he could not have walked or run after receiving it. He received a compound, comminuted fracture of both bones of the right leg. Though his back was toward the officers as he ran, the bullet entered not from the rear but from the side. A section of bone and much tissue were torn away. There was at least one other armed person in the immediate vicinity because the officers heard two shots fired besides their own. Their testimony differs as to whether these shots were immediately before or immediately after the officers fired. On this showing, the plaintiff’s testimony that as he glanced back he saw Sutfin with his rifle leveled at him, and Sutherland’s testimony that his two shots were not fired *709 at plaintiff, would seem to be scant basis for a finding tliat Sutfin fired' the shot that inflicted the injury. Corporal Dilley is emphatic in his testimony that the plaintiff was shot “after he had disappeared” from the view of the officers. But even if this testimony is to be disregarded and the possibility of the wound’s having been inflicted by an unknown person be eliminated, and the responsibility be placed on the officers, we are unable to perceive how it can be said with assurance that it was Sutfin and not Sutherland who fired the bullet which struck the plaintiff. The problem then is narrowed to the query as to whether the railway company is liable in damages to the plaintiff, on the hypothesis that he was unjustifiably wounded by one of the company’s special police officers.

At the time of this affair, were the two special officers acting as agents of the Norfolk & Western Railway Company, or were they acting for the people in the discharge of the duties of public officials?

Our statute which provides for the appointment of special police officers by the Governor, at the instance of steam or electric railway companies, contains this language: “Every police officer appointed under the provisions of this section shall be a conservator of the peace within each county in which any part of such railroad may be situated, and in which such oath or a certified copy thereof shall have been filed with the clerk of the county court or other tribunal established in lieu thereof; and, in addition thereto, he shall possess and may exercise all the powers and authority, and shall be entitled to all the rights, privileges and immunities, within such counties, as are now or hereafter may be vested in or conferred upon the regularly elected or appointed constables of such county.” Code 1931, 61-3-41.

An individual commissioned by the Governor as a special police officer occupies a dual role. Whether in a given instance, he acts as the private agent of his employer or as a public official will depend on the attending circumstances. It is a general proposition that such special officer is deemed to act in pursuance of his public duty when he is attempting to vindicate the law and bring violators thereof to justice. Al *710 though paid by his employer, he is prima facie a public officer and not a private servant. McKain v. Railroad Co., 65 W. Va. 233, 64 S. E. 18, 23 L. R. A. (N. S.) 289; Layne v. C. & O. Railway Co., 66 W. Va. 607, 67 S. E. 1103; Foster v. Railway Co., 140 Mich. 689, 104 N. W.

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Bluebook (online)
182 S.E. 880, 116 W. Va. 705, 1935 W. Va. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-norfolk-western-railway-co-wva-1935.