Chesapeake & O. Ry. Co. v. Hawkins
Chesapeake & O. Ry. Co. v. Hawkins
Opinion of the Court
This action was prosecuted by defendant in error, hereinafter called plaintiff, against plaintiff in error, hereinafter called defendant, for recovery of damages sustained by the death of his intestate, Samuel C. Delay, caused by the alleged negligence of the defendant’s employés. The facts material to the disposal of the assignments of error are simple. The Chesapeake & Ohio Railway bridge at Gauley station is 558 feet long between the abutment and 54 feet above the water of New river. The station on the East side of New river is 400 feet from the abutment. The framework and- supports of the bridge are all underneath, and nothing on top except rails and railroad ties. The ties do not extend out a sufficient distance on either side of the rails to afford room for a train to pass a person on the bridge. A high hill or embankment runs up to the abutment of the bridge on the west side of New river for quite a distance, which bank is almost perpendicular. This bank did not extend out more than 12 or 15 inches beyond the ends of the ties, and was filled out to the edge of the bank with loose cinders. On the 22d of April, 1905, Samuel C. Delay, 19 years of age, started to walk over this bridge from the station on the east to the west side of New river. He had reached about the middle of the bridge, when a shifting engine, which was standing by the station and in plain view of Delay, was started across the bridge. There is evidence to the effect, that, when the train started across the bridge, Delay was walking — there was nothing to obstruct the view of the engineer — that Delay started to run when the train started, and as the train increased its speed he increased his. One witness says that, when the engineer was crossing the bridge,' the crew were “ringing the bell, and, if-1 ain’t mistaken, they were opening the throttle and shutting it off/Hnd running it up and shutting it off a few times. I do not know how many times they done it.” Another witness says that they were “laughing and hollowing, and ringing the bell and blowing the whistle.” Delay “was running for his life it looked like.” The witnesses differ as to the distance the engine was from Delay as he reached the end of the bridge and jumped off — some say “ten or twelve” — others “six or eight feet from him.” Taggart, a witness for the defendant, says he was “about 150 feet” from the engine. Several 'of plaintiff’s witnesses say that the engine was- running at a “high rate of speed,” whereas the engineer for defendant says that the engine was moving at from “two to three miles an hour”; that Delay was not running at the time he left the track; that when he left the bridge Delay was 200 feet ahead of the engine; that when he saw them he “slowed up.” Mrs. Shanlon, a witness for plaintiff, testified that the engineer told her, after the accident, “that he was just running for fun; that he would not have had it happened for anything; that he was sorry for it, for what he did.” The uncontradicted evidence is that, as Delay reached the end
‘•(2) The court instructs the jury that the railroad company, the defendant in this case, owed no duty 1o Samuel C. Delay, if they believed from all of the evidence that he was a trespasser on the bridge of the defendant company, except that the law requires that after the peril of the said Samuel C. Delay was actually discovered that those in charge of the train will use reasonable diligence to prevent injuring him, and if they believe from all of the evidence that; such reasonable diligence was used and the said Samuel (1. Delay had ample time, or although he did not have ample time to save himself,'that the action of those in charge of the engine was not wanton, malicious, or intentional that they should find for 1he defendant.
"(:!) The court instructs the jury that the burden of proof in this ease is on the plaintiff to show that, when Samuel C. Delay was on the trestle that he was discovered by the trainmen in charge of the engine, and that it; was known to the men in charge of the engine that he could not got off the bridge in time to avoid injury, and that the said trainmen willfully and recklessly Injured him. and unless they believed this from all of the evidence by a preponderance thereof that they shall find for the defendant.”
‘qa) That part of the said general charge that speaks of the fluty owed to plaintiff's intestate, after discovery by the servants of the defendant in that it does not say that after such discovery the said servants of said defendant owed him no duty except not to wantonly injure the said plaintiffs intestate.”
“The plaintiff’s intestate, it is admitted, was upon the bridge of the defendant company. He was himself negligent in being there. He was a trespasser. Under those circumstances the company, or its employes, who conducted its train, owed him no duty until they discovered him in peril, if he was. When they did discover him in peril, if he was in peril, they owed to him the duty .not to wantonly injure him.”
This, we think, the correct measure of duty imposed upon defendant’s servants.-
“Before any recovery can be had in this ease, you must be satisfied that the engine was at the time Delay was hurt so conducted that it placed Delay in a position of danger and that the accident that subsequently occurred was the result of the danger in which such negligence on the part of defendant placed him.”
Affirmed.
For other eases see same topic & ¿numbek in Dec. & Am. Digs. 1907 to date, & Rep’r Indexes
Reference
- Full Case Name
- CHESAPEAKE & O. RY. CO. v. HAWKINS, Sheriff
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Railroads (§ 376*) — Injuries to Trespassers — Care Required — Intentional Injury. In an action for injuries to a trespasser on a railroad right of way, plaintiff, in order to recover, is bound to show a want of ordinary care to avoid injury to him after his peril was discovered by the operatives of the train, but is not bound to show that his injury resulted from malicious or intentional wrongdoing on the part of such operatives. [Ed. Note. — For other cases, see Railroads, Cent. Dig. §§ 1275-1279; Dec. Dig, § 376.*] 2. Railroads (§ 401*) — Persons on Right oe Way — Trespassers—Death-Instructions. In an action for death of a trespasser on a railroad bridge in endeavoring to escape from an approaching engine, an instruction that the burden was on plaintiff to show that deceased was on the tresfle, that he was discovered by the trainmen, and that, knowing he could not get off the bridge in time to avoid injury, they willfully and recklessly injured him, was properly refused, as requiring too high a degree of proof, both in requiring proof that the trainmen knew that decedent could not get off the bridge in lime to avoid injury, as well as that they willfully and recklessly injured him. [Ed. Note. — -For other cases, see Railroads, Doc. Dig. § 403.*] S. Railroads (§ 401*) — Trespassers—-Death—Instructions. Where, in an action for death of a trespasser while attempting to escape from a railroad bridge in front of an approaching engine, the court charged that plaintiff was a trespasser and was negligent in being where he was, and that under such circumstances the operatives of the engine owed him no duty until they discovered him In peril, and then owed him the duty not to wantonly injure him, the court did not err in omitting from its general charge on the duty owed to decedent after his discovery by defendant’s servants that they owed him no duty, except not to wantonly injure him. [Ed. Note. — For other cases, see Raiiroads, Dee. Dig. § 401.*] 4. Railroads (§ 391*) — Trespassers on Bridge — Wanton Injury. Defendant’s engineer saw decedent walking over a railroad bridge in front of the engine when it was running only two or three miles an hour; and, while decedent ran and was endeavoring to get off the bridge before being overtaken, the engineer in a spirit of levity approached close to decedent. rang the hell, and blew the whistle expecting him to escape, and not anticipating that he would jump to tho side of the track on insecure cinders at the end of the bridge, and fall to the rocks below, as he did. Held, that such conduct was wantonly negligent and a breach, of the engineer’s duty. [Ed. Note. — For other cases, see Railroads, Cent. Dig. §§ 1326-1330; Dec. Dig. § 391.*] 5. Railroads (§ 391*) — Death of Trespasser — Willful Injury — Knowledge of Employés. Decedent, while trespassing on defendant’s railroad bridge, was followed by an engine, the operatives of which, on seeing that he could not escape, followed close to him, blowing the whistle and ringing the bell, causing him to run to reach the opposite side, and, as he did* so, he jumped to the side of the track on certain loose cinders, and, these giving way, caused him to fall on the rocks below. Held that, if the act of defendant’s engineer was the proximate cause of decedent’s death, defendant would not bo relieved from liability by the fact that the engineer did not know that the embankment at the end of the bridge was insufficient to hold decedent’s weight when he stepped on it. [Ed. Note. — For other cases, see Railroads, Cent. Dig. §§ 1326-3330; Dec. Dig. § 391.*] 8. Railroads (§ 386*) — Trespassers—Death—Contributory Negligence. Decedent, having made an honest effort to escape in a reasonably prudent way, performed the legal duty imposed on him, under the rule that persons in great peril are not required to exercise the care that wojild ordinarily be characteristic of a prudent man. [Ed. Note. — For other cases, see Railroads, Cent. Dig. § 1295; Dec. Dig. § 386.*]