Carper v. Monongahela Valley Traction Co.
Carper v. Monongahela Valley Traction Co.
Opinion of the Court
In an action for damages by plaintiff against defendant for its alleged negligence in killing a steer the court sustained1
The sole question presented for decision is whether the evidence is sufficient to show negligence or from which negligence can reasonably be inferred within the-well settled rules applicable in such cases?
The action was begun before a justice, and was finally tried on appeal in the circuit court on January 29, 1915. The time of the accident was 9:05 o ’clock, on .the night of July 17, 1914. The killing of the steer was by a regular north bound traction car being driven by motorman Musgrove, from the City of Weston to the City of Clarksburg, and at a point on the traction line where it passes through the farm of the plaintiff. The only eye witness to the immediate accident was motorman Musgrove, a man of mature age, with ten years experience as motorman, and as his testimony indicates a very intelligent witness, introduced by plaintiff to maintain his case.
Mr. Musgrove testified that the night was dark, that just before reaching the place of the accident it had rained some and the track was a little slippery. The testimony of some other witnesses tends to show that it had not rained at the particular point and incident of the injury, but it is conceded that it did rain hard there within a half hour after the accident, and there is little doubt but that the sky was beclouded and the twilight obscured thereby: at all events the motorman says the night was dark, though not too dark, as some of the witnesses say, to go about without a lantern. The evidence of Musgrove, and of other witnesses, two of them civil engineers, who made measurements and filed maps of the plan of the track, and profiles of the ground in the vicinity of the accident, shows without contradiction, that going in the direction the car was travelling the point where the steer was first struck on the track to the cattle guard ahead to which the steer was dragged by the impact before the car was brought to a stop is about fifty feet; that before reaching that point the track first runs on a curve of five degrees through a cut, about three feet deep on the east side of the track and the inside of the curve, and some six feet deep on the opposite side,
But the further contention of plaintiff’s counsel is, based on the expert evidence of one of the engineers and other witnesses, that at.a point on the curve three hundred and fifty or four hundred feet from where the steer first appeared to the motorman as he rounded the curve and came upon the straight piece
We cannot further detail the facts; it suffices to say that we have carefully read and considered' all the evidence and have come to the conclusion that the court was clearly right in sustaining the demurrer and denying the plaintiff relief.
The material facts are not in conflict, so as to haye entitled the plaintiff to have them submitted to the jury. While the witnesses may disagree in some points they are not in disagreement as to the substantial and conclusive facts, and if the case had been given to the jury, a verdict for plaintiff on the evidence could not have been permitted to stand. This is the test on the demurrer to evidence.
It is true, as decided in Robbins v. Railroad Co., 62 W.Va. 535, and the same principle was applied in Blankenship v. Kanawha & M. R. Co., 43 W. Va. 135, with respect to live stock on the track, that it is the duty of a railway company to keep a lookout for such stock upon the track, and failing to do so, if it be killed and the killing could by the exercise of ordinary care have been avoided, the railway company is liable though it may not in fact have been seen in time to avoid injuring or killing it. Ordinary care does not mean extraordinary care. It means such care as the employees of the railway company, under all the circumstances and consistent with their other duties should have observed respecting such dumb animals on the track. The evidence in the present case does not bring it within the rules of those cases. The motorman swears that he could not and did not see the steer in question in time to have avoided killing him. No one contradicts him; the facts do not contradict him, and a case of actionable negligence is not made out. Our opinion, therefore, is to affirm the judgment.
Judgment Affirmed.
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