Wilson v. N. Y., N. H. & H. R. R.

69 A. 364, 29 R.I. 146, 1908 R.I. LEXIS 31
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 20, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 69 A. 364 (Wilson v. N. Y., N. H. & H. R. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. N. Y., N. H. & H. R. R., 69 A. 364, 29 R.I. 146, 1908 R.I. LEXIS 31 (R.I. 1908).

Opinion

Johnson, J.

This is an action of the case brought by Jennie E. Wilson, as administratrix of the estate of Walter Wilson, to recover damages under the statute, for the death of her intestate, through the alleged negligence of the defendant.

On October 27th, 1902,. Walter Wilson was the middle brakeman on one of the defendant’s freight trains which left the West Exchange street yard in Providence at 6:55 A. M., for Pascoag. As the train, going at a rate of speed estimated at from seven to thirteen miles an hour, neared the Acorn street *149 crossing, Walter Wilson noticed several children running alongside the train, some, hanging onto the brace rods, and others hanging onto other parts of the cars. After he and another brakeman had tried to drive them off, by shouting and trying to scare them, without success, Wilson climbed down the ladder at the front end of the seventh car, the ladder being on the end, and not on the side, of the car, and when two or three steps from the bottom he again threatened them. As they did not desist, he descended to the bottom, put his foot in the stirrup, which is on the outside of the car, turned his face toward the rear of the train, the children being back of the car he was on, waved his hand at them, and leaned outward and downward as if about to alight. While in that position he came in contact with an old fence-post standing beside the track, and was thrown to the ground and sustained injuries which caused his death.

The plaintiff’s declaration was in three counts, alleging (1) * neglect of the defendant to have its roadbed and tracks in safe and proper condition by constructing the same in close proximity to a certain post-on Harris avenue near Acorn street; (2) neglect to give the intestate notice or warning-of the defective and dangerous condition of the said place, and of the danger; (3) negligence in erecting, suffering, and permitting to be maintained near said tracks a post in close proximity to freight cars.

At the trial in the Superior Court the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff for the sum of five thousand dollars damages. Thereupon the defendant duly filed a motion for a new trial, alleging as grounds therefor:

1. The verdict is against the law.

2. The verdict is against the evidence and the weight thereof.

3. The verdict is against the law and the evidence and the weight thereof.

4. The damages awarded in said cause were grossly excessive and unjust.

5. The defendant has-discovered new and material evidence which it had not discovered at the time of the trial of said *150 cause, and which, it could not have discovered at said time by the exercise of reasonable care.

The defendant’s motion for a new trial was denied, and the case is now before this court on the defendant’s bill of exceptions.

We will first consider the exception to the decision of the Superior Court denying the defendant’s motion for a new trial on the ground that the verdict is against the evidence and the weight thereof.

As to the location of the post, Goff, the engineer called by the plaintiff, testified that he measured the distance of the base of the post from the outside edge of the rail, and that it was three and fifty-two one-hundredths feet, or substantially three feet six inches. Buckland, a witness for the defendant, testified that he measured the distance from the top of the post, measuring horizontally to the outside of the rail, and that it ° was three feet eight inches. He testified that another man held the end of the tape on the inside of the end of the 'post, and he went over until he stood at a point vertically over the outside of the rail, and got his measurement' that way. He did not measure the distance between the base of the post and the rail. The height of the post from the ground was about four feet.

Measurements of the car, made May 31, 1906, showed that the overhang of the car from the outside of the rail to the outside of the sheathing was twenty-two and one half inches, and, measuring to the outside of the sill-step, was twenty-three and three-quarters inches. The car had no side-ladders, but the ladders were on the end. This car was eight feet nine inches wide. The stirrup hung fifteen and three-quarter inches below the car and was twenty-two and one-half inches above the top of the rail. The widest car in use in 1902 was nine feet eight inches. According t'o the testimony, therefore, the car on which Wilson was riding, having an overhang from the outside of the rail to the outer edge of the sill step of twenty-three and three-quarters inches, would come within eighteen and one-quarter inches of a post forty-two inches from the outside edge *151 of the rail; and would come within twenty and one-quarter inches of a post forty-four inches from the rail.

The testimony of nearly all the witnesses who were called in relation to the post, both for the plaintiff and for the defendant, was that the post leaned towards the track, -some making it a slight leaning, some three or four inches, some six inches, and some a foot or more. If the measurement by Goff, the engineer, of forty-two inches from the base of the post to the rail, was correct, the distance between the top of the post and the side of the car would necessarily be reduced below eighteen and one-quarter inches. Byron S. Brown testified that he should judge that this post was eighteen or twenty inches from the side of a box car. Benjamin S. Holloway testified that he walked between the post and the car that night or the next; and brushed his shoulders on the post and car as he walked through. His measurement in that position, made in court, was eighteen inches. His testimony at a former trial was put in evidence, as follows: “Q. Put your arm as it was at the time you went between the post and the car. Q. That is about twenty-three inches; is that the place where it is? A. Yes; where you got your finger there.” It is to be noted that the distance, twenty-three inches, was stated by counsel, and then a question as to the place followed. Holloway testified that the post was loose in the ground when he examined it.

There was evidence that Wilson worked for the defendant, as brakeman, February 8, 1902; that he had worked on this train two days in February, ten days in April, and from October 6th until October 27th, the day he was killed.

The plaintiff introduced certain rules of the defendent, viz., Rule No. 975: “Allow no person to ride on a freight train without orders from the Superintendent, except employees in discharge of their duties or persons in charge of freight requiring personal care in transit mentioned in every case on manifest.” This was the last of a group of regulations entitled “Special Instructions to Freight Conductors.'”

Rule No. 1063, under the title “ Rules for Freight Brakemen,” which reads: “ Be familiar with the rules and regulations of the road, especially those .pertaining to freight transportation. *152 Assist the conductor in his work, attend carefully to his instructions and in every way help to secure safety and regularity in the handling of the train'and the merchandise transported by it.”

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Bluebook (online)
69 A. 364, 29 R.I. 146, 1908 R.I. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-n-y-n-h-h-r-r-ri-1908.