Wilson v. Southern Ry.

75 S.E. 1014, 93 S.C. 17, 1912 S.C. LEXIS 285
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedOctober 14, 1912
Docket8342
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 75 S.E. 1014 (Wilson v. Southern Ry.) 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
Wilson v. Southern Ry., 75 S.E. 1014, 93 S.C. 17, 1912 S.C. LEXIS 285 (S.C. 1912).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Chief Justice Gary.

This is an action for damages, alleged to have been sustained, on account of the wrongful acts of the defendants, in causing the death of plaintiff’s intestate.

The allegations of the complaint, material to the questions involved, are as follows:

(1) “That heretofore, to wit: On the 31st day of October, 1906, one D. Rainey Wilson embarked as a passenger on a train of the defendant, Southern Railway Company, on said line of railway, of which train the defendant, Ed S. Mott, was conductor and in charge, for passage from Columbia to Smith’s Turnout, and paid his fare to that point, and notified the defendant, Southern Railway Com *19 pany, its officers and agents, of his wish to leave said train at that point, but was carried past said - station to Ogden1, near which station said D. Rainey Wilson, at the invitation of the agents of the defendant, Southern Railway Company, alighted from said train, and was seen afterwards, while still on the premises of the defendant, Southern Railway Company, as a passenger, and while leaving the same for his home, and proceeding to make use of the nearest highway crossing for that purpose, was struck by another train of said Southern Railway Company operated in a wantonly, reckless and negligent manner, was thereby horribly mangled and killed almost instantly, to the damage of the plaintiff and those for whom he sues, twenty thousand dollars.

(2) “That the death of the said D. Rainey Wilson, as aforesaid, was caused by the wilful, wanton and negligent conduct, omissions and derelictions of the defendant, Southern Railway Company, its servants and agents, as proximate causes thereof, (a) in failing to notify the said D. Rainey Wilson, of the approach to and arrival at his destination; of said train, on which he was a passenger; (b) in stopping the said train at Ogdon in a dangerous and unusual place, and there inviting the said D. Rainey Wilson to alight; (c) in operating the train that struck the said D. Rainey Wilson in a wilful, wanton, reckless and negligent manner, in failing to give the signals required by law at highway crossings; (d) in failing to give the said D. Rainey Wilson, a reasonable opportunity to alight at his destination, and by the joint and concurrent wilfulness, wantonness and negligence of the defendants, in failing to notify the said D. Rainey 'VVilson, of the arrival of the train on which he was riding, at his destination, and in stopping said -train at a dangerous and unusual place at Ogden-, and inviting said D. Rainey Wilson there to alight, as proximate causes of said death.”

The defendants served separate answers to1 the complaint, and merely interposed a general denial of its allegations.

*20 At the close of the plaintiff’s testimony, the defendants made a motion for a nonsuit, on the ground that the undisputed evidence showed, that the plaintiff’s intestate was a trespasser, and that there was no testimony, tending to show the breach of any duty, which the defendant owed him as such.

In granting the motion for a nonsuit, his Honor, the presiding Judge, assigned the following reasons : “I will have to grant the motion for a nonsuit. I don’t think there is an}'’ evidence of such wilfulness, wantomxess, or recklessness, as would malee them .responsible, to a man who' was a trespasser, on the. track, and I think the evidence tends to show, and only tends to show, that at the time he was struck, the deceased had ceased to be-a passenger.” (Italics ours.)

■ The appellant’s first and second exceptions, assign error on the part of his Honor, the presiding Judge, in holding:

“That the deceased was a trespasser on the track of the defendant, when the questions should have been left to the jury, there being some evidence tending to1 show, that said deceased was a passenger, or at least a licensee.

“That the evidence tends tO' show, and only tends to show, that the deceased had ceased to be a passenger, although it appeared by the evidence that he had been wrongfully carried past his destination, and discharged at the wrong station, and while in the act of returning to' his proper destination, was struck without warning, or even being seen by those operating the passenger train; the status of -the deceased at the time of the injury, thus being a question of fact for the jury.”

There was testimony to the effect, that the plaintiff’s intestate purchased a ticket to Smith Turnout, but that the defendant failed to give him notice of the station, when the train arrived at that point, and he was carried to Ogden, the next station, which was about three miles from Smith’s Turnout; that the train ran into a sidetrack at Ogden where it remained about thirty minutes, waiting for the train to *21 pass, which was going in an opposite direction; that plaintiff’s intestate was drinking heavily, after leaving Columbia, where he had gone that morning, to attend the agricultural fair; that when the expected train arrived, it failed to give the required signals in approaching the station; that plaintiff’s intestate left the train, upon which he was a passenger, before the expected train arrived, and was not seen alive thereafter, but one of his legs was discovered about 300 or 400 yards from the station, on the railroad track, in the direction of Smith’s Turnout, the main part of his body was also found.upon the railroad track, about 50 yards nearer Smith’s Turnout, and other parts of his body were scattered along the railroad track, for several hundred yards nearer Smith’s Turnout; that there is a path near where the leg was found, leading from the dirt road to the railroad track, and which has -been used for years, by those approaching and leaving the station. The following testimony of Wm. C. Pearson, a witness for the plaintiff, is explanatory of this locality:

. “Do you know where that path comes up from that neighborhood road to the depot? Yes, sir. How long has that been used, Mr. Pearson ? O, ever since I can mind. What did-you say? I guess about ten or fifteen years. That is as far as I can mind about it. The public used it going to the station? Pretty generally; yes, sir. Do you recollect whether a leg was found north of where that goes out to- the road, or not? Found south of the path, where it goes up the railroad. How far south of the path ? I reckon something like ten or fifteen feet or yards, or something like that; right close to it. Ten or fifteen feet south of the path? Yes, sir. A person in getting off at Smith’s Turnout— I mean at Ogden — which way would he go in getting to Smith’s? They would go back down the railroad, if they were wanting to go. That would be the straightest way. Have you any public road, leading directly from there to Smith’s? There is some roads go down the railroad. There *22 is no public road, unless you get in the old Saluda road. That is a public road. That is. considerably out of the way? Yes, sir; about a mile.”

Plaintiff’s attorneys then propounded this question to the witness : “People making time from Ogden to Smith, which way do they generally go?”

Upon the objection of the respondent’s attorneys, the Court ruled that the testimony, which the plaintiff’s attorney sought to introduce, was.

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181 S.E. 642 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1935)
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Bluebook (online)
75 S.E. 1014, 93 S.C. 17, 1912 S.C. LEXIS 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-southern-ry-sc-1912.