Vest v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co.

187 S.E. 358, 117 W. Va. 457, 1936 W. Va. LEXIS 95
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 19, 1936
Docket8340
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 187 S.E. 358 (Vest v. Chesapeake & Ohio 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
Vest v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co., 187 S.E. 358, 117 W. Va. 457, 1936 W. Va. LEXIS 95 (W. Va. 1936).

Opinions

This action involves the duty of a railroad company to small children, who, at a certain place, habitually boarded a slowly moving freight train.

A path used by school children crossed a railroad track about one thousand feet below a water column. The plaintiff, aged six years, and other small children were returning home from school along that path on October 23, 1935. They arrived at the track coincident with the arrival of the train in question. Since it was stopping at the water column, its rate of speed at the path was just a few miles per hour. The plaintiff and several of his companions climbed on the train. He fell off and suffered practically the complete loss of an arm and a leg. For those injuries, he recovered herein a judgment of $50,000.00.

The train in question stopped at the water column daily between three and four o'clock P. M. During the school months, the train usually arrived when the children were on the path returning home from school. A number of witnesses testified without contradiction that during the school months for several years before plaintiff was injured, it was the constant practice of the school children to board that train and ride until it stopped at the water column. A witness who had lived in sight of the track for about four years said: "Ever since I lived over there the children always got on the train; the train pulled up slow, and they would get on the train and ride it. I could hear them playing along and riding the train; I don't know how many times; about every evening because I got in the practice of watching those children." Another witness who lived close to the track testified that *Page 459 practically every school day, she saw some of the school children, ranging in size from big girls to "just little tots" hop the train; and that they would do so at times in the presence of the train crew, whom she never heard make any objection. One school boy, aged thirteen years, who participated in the practice, testified that the school children "from the primer on up would * * * grab the train and just make a play toy of it, and the brakemen see them and just say `Hello'." Another boy, also aged thirteen, who had participated in the practice for about four years prior to plaintiff's injury, testified that the school children habitually boarded the train without objection from the train crew and that on one occasion when three boys were jumping on and off the train, a brakeman said to them: "If you are going to ride the train get on and ride and quit hopping on and off."

The train crew consisted of the engineer, fireman, conductor and two brakemen, all of whom were used as witnesses by defendant. The engineer said he did not see the children on the day plaintiff was injured; but was not questioned as to thepractice of the children to board the train. The fireman testified that he did not see the children on that day and did not know of the practice. Neither the conductor nor thebrakemen were questioned as to seeing the children prior to theaccident or as to the practice. The fireman's ignorance, alone, cannot overcome the positive and detailed evidence of plaintiff's witnesses regarding the practice. It must be taken as fully proven, and as knowingly permitted, if not actually invited by the conductor and the brakemen.

The defendant tried the case on the theory that none of the train crew saw the plaintiff; that he was a trespasser; and that in the absence of actual knowledge of his danger, they owed him no duty. That theory was based on Angeline v. Ry. Co.,99 W. Va. 85, 128 S.E. 275, 43 A.L.R. 34, which does hold that a railroad company owed no duty to a trespassing child except to refrain from knowingly injuring him, and that it is not the duty of a train crew to police the cars when in motion to prevent *Page 460 children from jumping on the train. That holding, however, must be limited to cases factually similar to that case. There a child, after being warned by a brakeman not to ride a train, attempted to board the train surreptitiously and was injured. There a lone trespass was involved. Here, boarding the train was habitual and was done under the eyes and with the tacit permission of the train crew. Hence, the controlling facts in the two cases are dissimilar.

The Angeline case is reported in 43 A.L.R. 34, and is supported by an extensive annotation commencing on p. 38. An examination of the cases annotated fails to discover a single one with facts closely analogous to those of the instant case. Defendant has cited only two cases from the annotation,Swartwood's Guardian v. Louisville N. R. Co., 129 Ky. 247,111 S.W. 305, 19 L.R.A. (N.S.) 1112, and Louisville N. R.Co. v. Bennett's Adm'r., 207 Ky. 498, 269 S.W. 549, both from Kentucky. In the Swartwood case, the court said of the attempts of children to board the train: "It is true it is known that such trespasses are probable; but they are sporadic." In theBennett case, the decedent was approximately fourteen years old, and the opinion of the court was based on the duty of the train crew to boys of that age in contradistinction to the duty to children of tender years. Here, the facts that the attempts of children to board the train were habitual (during school months) and that the plaintiff was only six years old, clearly differentiate this case from the Swartwood and Bennett cases.

The summation of the annotator, supra, is "Railroad companies are ordinarily under no duty of keeping trespassing children from boarding their cars." We recognize that rule; but it is a general rule, formulated, as its words imply, to meet the ordinary case of trespassing. It was never designed to meet an extraordinary situation, such as that presented here, of license to children of tender years. After recognizing the general rule, the Supreme Court of Kentucky said in Louisville N. R. *Page 461 Co. v. Steele, 179 Ky. 605, 201 S.W. 43, 49, L.R.A. 1918D, 317: "But when as in this case, there is evidence to show that boys of immature age and discretion are habitually permitted by the conductor to jump on and ride moving trains then the company (railroad) voluntarily assumes the duty of anticipating that they will do what he has permitted and consented that they might do, and the further duty of exercising ordinary care to look out for and protect them from injury." After recognizing the general rule, the Supreme Court of Georgia likewise said inAshworth v. Ry. Co., 116 Ga. 635, 43 S.E. 36, 38, 59 L.R.A.

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Bluebook (online)
187 S.E. 358, 117 W. Va. 457, 1936 W. Va. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vest-v-chesapeake-ohio-railway-co-wva-1936.