244 F. 397 | 4th Cir. | 1917
This is a suit instituted by plaintiff in error, plaintiff below, in the District Court of the United States for the Western District of Virginia, to recover damages on account of injuries sustained by plaintiff, who was the foreman of the roundhouse, while attempting to clean out a sand pipe which was stopped up. Plaintiff was employed by the defendant as a machinist at Elmore, W. Va, at which a roundhouse is maintained where engines are stored and certain repairs are made.
Plaintiff says that shortly after he had fallen and had been removed by other employés to a point several feet in front of the engine he looked. at the engine and remarked that the step from which he slipped and fell was slanting from one to one and a half inches forward. However, there was no evidence offered tending to corroborate this statement by the other employes who were present. The other employés present testified that they did not observe that the step was slanting or that there was anything wrong with it. In addition to the plaintiff’s testimony plaintiff introduced two other witnesses who said that they examined this step a month or two after the accident, and that it was slanting forward; the front portion of the step being from one to two inches lower than the rear portion.
Both the day and night foreman of the roundhouse at Elmore, who had charge pf keeping the engine in repair, testified that they never knew there was anything wrong with the step. The engineer who had been running the engine and the hostler who had charge of it in the roundhouse aíso testified that they had no knowledge of any defect in the step. There was no evidence produced by the plaintiff to show how the alleged defect in the step was caused or how long it had been in that condition.
When all of the evidence had been introduced, the defendant moved the court to direct the jury to return a verdict in favor of the defendant. This motion was opposed by the counsel for the plaintiff, and after the motion was fully argued the court took the same under advisement from Saturday afternoon until Monday morning. When the court convened Monday morning the judge rendered an opinion in writing, which is made a part of the record, sustaining the defendant’s motion to direct a verdict. After the court had rendered its decision, the plaintiff asked to be permitted to take a voluntary nonsuit. The court refused to grant plaintiff’s request, and directed the jury to return a verdict in favor of the defendant, and judgment was entered accordingly. The plaintiff excepted, and the case now comes .here on a writ of error.
In determining- this point, it should be borne in mind that no witness testified that this step was defective before the accident occurred. Indeed, the first evidence we have of the existence of the alleged defective step is the testimony of the plaintiff, who says that he did not discover it. until after he had been injured. From the nature of things, the respective engineers, firemen, and other employes who had from time to time had charge of this engine would have observed as glaring a defect as the one described by the plaintiff; therefore, if the step was defective in any respect, it appears that the defendant company could not have had either actual or constructive knowledge of the same prior to the time plaintiff was injured. It further appears that no one ever fell from the step or was injured in any way on account of its condition.
Counsel for plaintiff insists that the defective condition of the step was in plain view, and could have been seen even by casual observation, and, further, if the foreman had exercised even ordinary care as to the condition of the engine, he could have discovered the same. It appears from the testimony of plaintiff that the accident occurred when he was returning from the third trip to the point where he was working on the engine, and it further appears that he used this step each trip. If the defect was so obvious and easily discovered the plaintiff would undoubtedly have observed it, but, as we have stated, he testified positively that he never discovered that anything was wrong
This court in the case of Parks v. Southern Railway Co., 143 Fed. 276, 74 C. C. A. 414, in discussing this phase of the question, says:
“At common law the action of the court upon a motion for a nonsuit was not a discretionary one, but the plaintiff, as of right, could at any time before verdict exercise this privilege; and this is now substantially the rule in North Carolina. But the more reasonable practice, certainly so far as the federal courts are concerned, is that the plaintiff has the right to take a nonsuit at any time before the case has been submitted to the judge or jury for determination. The plaintiff upon the making of a motion to instruct a verdict against him, that being one of the methods in the federal court of finally disposing of the cause, should then elect whether or not he will take a nonsuit, and not submit his cause upon a full hearing of that motion to the court, and take chances of an adverse decision thereon.”
In view of what we have already said as respects this point, we do not deem it necessary to enter into a further discussion of the same, feeling as we do that the plaintiff was not taken by surprise, and that he was not deprived of introducing any newly discovered evidence before the case was submitted to the court for its final determination.
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the lower court is affirmed.