Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railroad v. Johnson
Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railroad v. Johnson
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This ■ action was brought in the circuit court of Humphreys county, at July term, 1877, to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff, a passenger on the cars and road of the defendant, through the negligence, carelessness, and want of skill in the management of the road, and the unsafe condition of cars, road-bed, cross-ties, rails,, engines, etc.
After several continuances by consent, and one by the company, the case was tried at July term, 1880, and resulted in verdict and judgment for five thousand dollars.
The first assignment of error • is the refusal of the court to continue the case on application of the company, supported by the affidavit of H. T. Cummins as to the materiality of facts that could be proved by Henry Burke. The affidavit states that till recently
It is not pretended that any effort had been made at any previous time to procure the attendance or the deposition of the witness. The application was made at the eighth trial term. Burke was “until recently”1 in Nashville, within jurisdiction of the court. The company knew all the time of the materiality of the facts it alleges it can prove by him. He was an engineer on the road, and alleged to have been the engineer on the train to which the accident occurred. At the November term, 1879, the cause was continued by the company for witnesses whose affidavits ap- ■ pear in the record, and whose testimony, as appears from their affidavits, was substantially, in every material point, the same as would have been that of Burke.
As the bill of exceptions is an agreement of the tendency of the proof submitted by each side, and embodies in effect the character of proof the company claims it could make by Burke, we conclude the ' witnesses mentioned in former affidavits were examined on the trial.
The negligence in failing in the three years to summons the witness, or take steps to procure his testimony, and the apparent fact that such testimony . would have been cumulatives, preclude the company from making complaint of its want. It was no error to refuse the continuance.
“ The engineer, Col. Morris, was on cross-examination allowed to say, over defendant’s objection, that the whole road was not in first-class condition, as compared with the best roads in this country and England and Europe.”
The section boss was permitted on cross-examination, after testifying that “ the part of the road where the accident occurred was in good condition,” to say, over the objection of defendant, “that some parts of his section were in bad condition — not in first-class condition — and needed repairs, but not that part where the accident occurred.”
The declaration contains the general averment that the road was out of repair. The proof is confined to the section on which the accident happened, and involves the further averment of negligence and want of skill of the employes of the road. The proof tended to the establishment of both facts, and furnished such facts and circumstances as the jury might look to in its effort to arrive at truth. The fact that the overseer or boss was guilty of neglect of duty, and
This answers the objection that the engineer was permitted to prove the whole road was not in first-class condition; the statement embraces the point of accident. The well-settled rule in this State is, that railroad companies are required to keep their machinery, roads, road-beds, etc., in repair and condition up to the best state of the art in such things.
The section master was permitted, over objection, to state that he “ might have said, but did not remember, to some persons after the accident, and after he had been discharged, that that part of the road where the accident occurred was in bad condition, that the eompany would not furnish him iron and cross-ties; and to McKelvy, several times he might ¡have said, but did not remember, that his section was in bad condition, and that the company would not furnish him iron and ties to keep it in good condition.”
These statements of the witness are not attempted to be contradicted, and of themselves prove nothing,
But even if we should hereafter conclude to go a step farther, and require a definition of the “relative” and “comparative” terms, “highest,” “greatest,” and “ utmost care and skill,” such step is not
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railroad Company v. J. C. Johnson
- Status
- Published