Cicerello v. C. & O. Railway Co.

65 W. Va. 439 | W. Va. | 1909

Lead Opinion

Miller, President.

The plaintiff, as personal representative of Prank Olvino, deceased, seeks recovery of damages from defendant, for negligently causing the death of decedent on February 8, 1907, while employed by .Rinehart & Dennis, independent contractors, near Scott station, in Putnam county, in excavating and widening a hill side cut for another track along defendant's main line. Ol-vino's duty, as alleged, was to keep defendant's main track cleared of the dirt and rock which fell from the steam shovel employed in making the excavation. The negligence charged is, that defendant's servants and emplojres so carelessly and negligently, and with such great force and violence drove and struck against the said Prank Olvino, a certain locomotive with cars attached, thereby inflicting upon him such severe and fatal wounds and injuries, that he then and there died.

On the trial there was a verdict and judgment for plaintiff for $1,500.00, and for errors alleged to have been committed pre-liminaiy to and during the progress of the trial, and for refusal of the court below to set aside the verdict and award defendant a new trial, the defendant seeks a reversal of the judgment below.

Of the preliminary rulings complained of, the first is, that the court refused to continue the case on motion of defendant, when called for trial, because of the absence of P. B. Enslow, defend*441ant’s leading counsel; and because of the absence of J. B. Thomas, one of its witnesses; and the second is, the rejection of defendant’s special plea number two tendered. The motion to continue was supported by the affidavits of said Enslow and R. M. Baker, 'another attorney for the defendant. Baker was also cross-examined on the matter of his affidavit, and the clerk of the court was also examined in relation to the issuance of subpoenas for the witnesses, and the want of service and return thereof. This evidence shows that Enslow was necessarily absent in attendance upon the United States Circuit Court of Appeals at Richmond, on the day this case was set for trial, but that Baker, who assisted in the conduct of the trial on behalf of the •defendant, was present. The record of the trial shows that Enslow was a member of the well known firm of Simms & Ens-low, or Simms, Enslow, Eitzpatrick and Baker, that defendant’s special plea number two was signed by Alexander & Barnhart and R. M. Baker, attorneys, and not by either 'of the other firms of which Enslow was a member, and that Mr. Alexander was also present and assisted in the trial, and that the defense was conducted with skill and ability. In the case of- Rossett v. Gardner, 3 W. Va. 531, relied upon, upon the question of the absence of counsel, it was shown that appellant had used due diligence to be prepared for trial; that one of his counsel was unavoidably absent, and that the other, though present on a preceding day, was for some cause, not explained in the record, absent when the cause was heard, and the appellant was left without the aid of any counsel. In tlie present case defendant had able counsel present to conduct the trial. In the case of Myers and Axtell, Receivers v. Trice, 86 Va. 835-841-2, the absence of leading counsel on account of sickness, in connection with, the absence of an important witness, not summoned by reason of mistake in name, was held good cause for continuance, and denial of the continuance was, on writ of error, held sufficient cause for a reversal of the judgment. Several cases are cited by the Virginia court in support of its ruling, two- from Georgia, one United States Circuit Court decision, and the case of Rhode Island v. Massachusetts, 11 Peters 226. In the latter case, says the Virginia court, a continuance was granted by the Supreme Court of the United States upon the ground that the leading attorney for the state of Rhode Island was ill, although *442the attorney general of that state was present. The case was of exceptional importance says the court, and that the inference was that the court was influenced more by the deep concern and the high importance of the case than by any purpose to exemplify the rule in such cases. “In all such cases, however,” says the Virginia court, “the application should be watched with jealousy, and the .discretionary power of the court exercised with caution; but, if there is no sufficient reason to induce the belief that the alleged ground of the motion is feigned, a continuance should be granted, rather than to seriously imperil the just determination of the cause by refusing it.” This court further says: “Under the peculiar circumstances of the present case, and especially in view of tire very harsh ruling on the preceding motion, we are clearly of opinion that the circuit court erred in refusing to continue the case on the ground of the absence of the leading counsel of the defendants, by reason of sickness.”

With respect to the absence of the witness Thomas, the evidence shows that he was or had been in the employ of the defendant company, was in fact the fireman on the engine at the time of the killing of Olvino; that a subpoena for him and another witness was secured from the clerk only six days before the ease was called for trial and sent to the company’s counsel at Huntington; that no return of service thereof on Thomas was made, and the testimony of Baker, counsel for defendant on cross-examination, shows that he sent the subpoena for Thomas to the company’s superintendent requesting him to secure the presence of Thomas, who, he was told, was at Hinton, and gave directions that an order be given him on the ticket agent there for transportation. He did not know whether Thomas had been served or provided with transportation. We do not think the record shows due diligence on the part of defendant to secure the presence of Thomas. Besides he was only one of the numerous witnesses present at the time of the killing of the deceased, including the engineer, and who were present and examined as witnesses on the trial and gave testimony. Motions for continuance are generally addressed to the sound discretion of the trial court. The judgment of the court thereon not being reviewable on writ of error and appeal unless there has been manifest abuse of such discretion.. Mullinax v. Waybright, 33 W. Va. 84; Halstead v. Horton, 38 W. Va. 727; State v. Lane, 44 *443W. Va. 730. It was not shown what was proposed to he proven by the witness. Where the motion to continue is based on the absence of a witness it must be shown that proper diligence to secure his presence has been used, and if there is any ground to suspect that the continuance is for delay, it must appear what evidence the absent witness is expected to give. State v. Brown, 62 W. Va. 546. In Tompkins v. Burgess, 2 W. Va. 187, and Dinmey v. Wheeling, etc. R. Co., 27 W. Va. 33, it is said that on such motion it must be shown that the same facts cannot be proved by any other witness in attendance and that the party whose witness is absent cannot proceed in the absence of such witness. The affidavit of Baker is that the witness is material and that defendant cannot prove the same facts by any one else, as he is informed; but on cross examination it is shown that he does not know what Thomas will swear, except from his report. It is not shown what this report was. It is suggested in brief of counsel, however, that as Thomas was fireman on the engine that killed deceased, he would be a material witness, he and the engineer being the'only two persons on the engine, and that each seeing what occurred from different points of view, this rendered Thomas a most important witness. But other witnesses were present and gave testimony as to- what was seen and heard by them from their several view points, including the ringing of the bell and the blowing of the whistle, and we cannot see that the defendant was greatly prejudiced by the absence of Thomas. We cannot say from this record that there was any abuse of the discretion of the court on the motion to continue. We do not think this a parallel case to the Yirginia case. Evidently the court there was more influenced by the arbitrary ruling of the trial court in refusing to continue on the ground of the absence of an important witness than because of the absence •of counsel.

Was there error in rejecting special plea number two? By this plea defendant challenged the right of plaintiff to maintain this suit upon the ground of non-residence, being an alien and a subject of the King of Italy, and thereby disqualified and prohibited by sections 3258, 3259, Code 1906, from act-' ing as administrator. One is not disqualified, however, to act as administrator, because a citizen of another state or country. Eon-residence would disqualify plaintiff. Butcher v. Kunst, de-*444eided at the present term. The plea, by reference to the citizenship of plaintiff, seems to imply, that citizenship is the equivalent of residency.

But can the appointment of the plaintiff be collaterally attacked on the ground of non-residence? This depends upon whether such appointment would be void or voidable only. It is argued that the appointment of a non-resident administrator is absolutely void, and we are cited, to the following cases for this proposition: Scobey v. Gano, 35 Ohio St. 551; Sherman v. Ballou, 8 Cowan 304; Shipman v. Butterfield, 11 N. W. 283; and also Bell v. Love, 72 Ga. 125; Dooley v. Bell, 87 Ga. 74; Grande v. Chaves, 15 Texas 550; Perry v. St. J. & W. R. R. Co., 29 Kansas 420; Jeffersonville R. R. Co. v. Swayne, 26 Ind. 477, and Central R. R. Co. v. C. Crogen, 71 Ill. 177. Some of these cases do seem to support the proposition, the others we do not think do to the extent claimed. Shipman v. Butterfield; Perry y. St. J. & W. R. R. Co., and Jeffersonville R. R. Co. v. Swayne, seem to hold that where the statute does not authorize, or inhibits the appointment of a non-resident administrator, the question is jurisdictional, rendering the appointment of a nonresident void. In Bell v. Love, the appointment of the guardian, made at chambers, when the statute provided that such appointment could only be made at a regular term of the court, was held absolutely void. In one or two of the cases where the law required a petition setting forth the jurisdictional facts, and the jurisdictional fact not being shown, the appointment was held void. But whatever be the law of other states on the principal proposition involved here, it is certainly not the law of Virginia or of this state, that the appointment by the county court of a non-resident administrator, disqualified by the statute, is absolutely void and may be collaterally attacked. Whether one applying for administration be a resident, within the meaning of the statute, is often a question of law and fact, to be determined by the county court, -a court of general and exclusive original jurisdiction of all matters of probate; and having such jurisdiction its orders are generally not void, but only voidable on appeal, writ of error or some other process of review provided by law, and cannot be questioned collaterally. Andrews v. Avory, 14 Grat. Va. Rep. Anno. 460, and other cases cited in mono-graphic note. However, there may be cases where the appoint*445ment would be absolutely .void and subject to collateral attack, as for example -where letters of administration previously granted are still in force, or where there is a will naming an executor who is still alive, or where the granting of administration was made on the estate of a person not dead, or, as in Bell v. Love, supra, where the appointment is made at a special term of the county court, held without notice, or where the notice does not cover the subject of a-ppointment of a personal representative. In all such cases there is absolute want of jurisdiction of the subject matter or of the parties, and the rule respecting collateral attack does not apply. In Yan Fleet on Collateral Attack, section 590, the writer says: “The appointment of a wrong person, such as a non-resident, or a stranger before the widow had renounced her right, or an alien, as administrator, is not void, and his acts are binding after his removal.” We are therefore of opinion that the court did not err in rejecting defendant’s special plea number two.

We are left to dispose of the case on its merits. To do so rightly we must first determine what rules and principles govern eases of this character. Counsel for defendant would have us apply rules and principles generally applied in the case of travelers, and watchmen at street and road crossings, and to track-men and yardmen, and to trespassers, or persons using the tracks and side tracks of a railroad company by license. We have numerous cases in this state, and there áre many decisions in other states, holding it to be the duty'of travelers in crossing a railroad to stop, look and listen, and that their failure to do so will excuse a railroad company from liability, although there be also negligence of trainmen in failing to give the usual signals at such points; that in the case of licensees or trespassers upon its track a railroad company owes them no duty except not to wantonly and wilfully run upon them without signal or warning; and that in the case of trackmen and yardmen, servants of the company, and presumed to be experts in the places of their employment, the law imposes upon them the duty to keep a lookout, and to know how to avoid danger, and a railroad company is not liable for injuries due to the negligence of trainmen, fellow servants of such employes, in failing to give the- usual warning and signals in the movement of trains. It is unnecessary for us to refer to this class of eases, of to discuss them in this *446connection, for in our opinion this case belongs to a class which is sui generis and must be disposed of on the rules and principles applicable to it.

As we have said, Olvino was the servant of an independent contractor, and in no sense a servant of the railroad company, or a fellow servant of the engineer and fireman or of the other trainmen to whose negligence his death is imputed. He was not a trespasser on the track, not a traclnnan or a yardman employed bjr the defendant, nor was he using the track by mere leave or license of the railroad company. He was at the place of his death in the discharge of duties assigned him by his immediate employer, a place where he had the right to be, performing the very necessary and important duty of keeping the track clear of obstructions continually occurring in the work being conducted there by the independent contractor, that its property and lives of defendant's trainmen and the passengers on its trains might be protected and preserved. The place where Ol-vino was at work was in a deep side cut, within a few feet of where the steam shovel, engaged in making the excavations, was at work, and which the evidence shows, made loud and distracting noises when in operation. About three hundred feet west was a curve around the hillside, beyond which a train approaching from that direction could not be seen, and when the steam shovel was in operation, the blowing of the whistle and the ringing of the bell, as the evidence shows, could be heard only with difficulty by those in charge of, or in close proximity to the steam shovel. The defendant must be charged with full notice of these facts and circumstances surrounding the deceased, and the question is, what were the reciprocal duties and obligations of the deceased and the defendant under the circumstances? The authorities hold that while the duty to use reasonable care in this relation is reciprocal, and the servant of a contractor can not recover for injuries resulting from his own negligence, nevertheless the law does not require such persons at work on the track to maintain a constant lookout for approaching trains and at the same time pursue their labor, but it does require of the operatives of trains the exercise of an active vigilance to avoid injuring such persons and that they should give reasonable danger signals to attract the attention of men so employed so as to enable them to get out of the way before it is too late. 3 El*447liott on Railroads (2nd Ed.), sections 1265b, c and d, citing under section 1265b, Haley v. New York &c. R. Co., 7 Hun, 84; Goodfellow, v. Boston &c. R. Co., 106 Mass. 461; Baltimore &c. R. Co. v. State, 33 Md. 542; McWilliams v. Detroit Mills Co., 31 Mich. 274; Barton v. New York &c. R. Co., 1 N. Y. S. Ct. (T. & C.) 297, affirmed in 56 N. Y. 660; Stinson v New York &c. R. Co., 32 N. Y. 333; O’Leary v. Chicago &c. R. Co. (Ia). 103 N. W. 362. Some authorities even hold that persons thus employed hare a' right to become engrossed in their employment and to expect that care and pains will be taken as to them. Schultz V. Chicago etc. R. Co., 44 Wis. 638; Goodfellow v. Boston etc. R. Co., supra. . We think the true doctrine, is, as laid down in Elliott, that the duty to use reasonable care in such relation is a reciprocal duty, and that the servant of a contractor can not recover for injuries due to his own negligence. The duty of a railroad company on the other hand, in cases like the one we have in hand, would seem to require of it such reasonable provisions and precautions, and the giving of such proper and adequate warnings and signals, as will' be reasonably adequate to avoid injury to persons thus employed. Here important work was going on in the building of a second track and many men, including the deceased, were engaged about the work. The conductor says he had no orders to slow down at this point; the engineer that he was driving the train at the rate of thirty miles per hour around this curve when he struck Olvino. But the engineer says, he blowed the whistle on the curve below Scott station, and also as he came around the curve' on the straight line; that when he saw Olvino, he was standing there some eight feet from the track with his shovel resting in his hands, facing the track and with his head turned towards the approaching engine; and that, as he guesses, when within twenty or thirty feet of Olvino he just stepped upon the track, and that as he did so he pulled the brake and emergency and by the time he had done that the engine struck him that quick;-that nothing he could have done at that moment could have prevented the accident. Another witness Rouper, employed by defendant to attend “to the interlocking and switches at Scott and the lamps also” says he was standing on the same side of the track about two hundred and ten feet from Olvino, and that when the train had pulled past him he saw Olvino walk right up across the. *448track in front of the train, but he did not know whether he had gone across or not until after he had been killed and the alarm given. Jones, superintendent for Rinehart & Dennis, a witness for defendant, who was present says: “At the time he was struck I was 50 or 60 feet from him, and looking right at him. He was working on the main line * * * shoveling dirt from a ditch on the RTorth side of track, and carrying it across and depositing it on the South side. * * * * I heard Rio. 8 coming, and when it was 550 or 600 feet away, Olvino walked across the track to the South side and dumped a shovel-full of dirt * * * about 6 feet from the rail. After he had dumped this dirt he stood there probably 6 feet from the end of the ties for about four or five seconds, looking in the direction of approaching train, which was in plain sight of him, and coming1 along at about 40 miles an hour. When the train was about 180 feet from him, he slowly walked upon the track, and was struck about the time he got in the center of it.” He says that Ol-vino where he was standing on the south side of the track was in a safe place; that about three hundred and fifty yards west of the point of the accident the engineer sounded the whistle and no other signal was given. The conductor of the train, the only other witness for defendant throws little light on the subject. His train, he says, was fifty minutes late that day; composed of seven'coaches, each about seventy feet in length, making the length of the train some seven or eight hundred feet including the engine. He is not questioned by either side as to whether or not the whistle was blown or the bell rung.

On the part of plaintiff it was proven by Cicerello that he was foreman in charge of the steam shovel, and of the men at work there with Olvino, and by several other witnesses employed there that they heard no whistle or bell for the cut. A school boy thirteen years of age on his way home from school with his brother crossed the track between Scott station and the place where Olivino was hit and saw the train coming, and heard the whistle blow for the station but heard no whistle blown or bell rung to give warning' to the men at work in .the cut. Griffith in the employ of the contractors, a witness examined by both sides, who was engaged, with another man, in laying track some four -hundred’ feet from Olvino, and where he could see the station and the train approaching, says he heard no whistle or bell *449rung for the cut; that he and his fellow workman spoke of the subject immediately after the train passed, the latter remarking that the, whistle was not blown, he replying he' had not heard it. He admitted, that the whistle might have blown and he not have heard it. The witnesses for the plaintiff also contradict flatly the evidence of Jones and of the engineer that Olvino stood looking at the approaching train, but on the contrary say that just before he was struck by the engine he was crossing the track diagonally with his back rather towards the approaching train and evidently did not see it coming; that the steam shovel made a loud noise. The plaintiff who was at work on the steam shovel testified that he did not hear the whistle nor see the train approaching or he would himself have called or warned Olvino. This is substantially all the material evidence bearing on the question of the negligence of defendant, and contributory negligence on the part of Olvino.

The defense of the defendant is want of negligence on its part and contributory negligence on the part of Olvino. In the case in hand these were questions of fact under the evidence solely within the province of the jury. There is such a conflict therein, both in respect to the blowing of the whistle and the ringing of the bell, and as to whether or not Olvino saw the train approaching and deliberately walked upon the track in front of the engine, that we are not permitted to say as a matter of law that defendant was without negligence or that Olvino was guilty of contributory negligence, resulting in his death. We need only refer to the authorities already cited in support of this proposition.

The defendant complains of the rejection of its instructions numbered five and seven. Humber 5 would have told the jury that if they believed from the evidence that the whistle was blown or bell rung for the last crossing west of where the accident occurred such fact was immaterial, and that they might nevertheless find for the defendant if they should further find from the evidence that the defendant was not otherwise negligent. The crossing evidently referred to is the one crossed by the school boy between Scott station and the place where Olvino was killed, and near where the engine came in sight of Olvino, and the place where the whistle was usually blown to warn the workmen at work in the cut. This being so the effect of the instruction *450would have been to tell the jury that although the defendant might have been negligent in failing to give the usual signals of warning to the men at work there, yet if the defendant was not otherwise negligent they might find a verdict in its favor. As thus interpreted it would have been contrary to the rules and principles governing the class of cases to which this belongs.

The seventh instruction would have told the jury that if they believed from the evidence that Olvino stepped upon the company’s track in front of the approaching train so suddenly that the train could not have been stopped before striking him they should find for the defendant. This instruction wholly ignore^ the question of negligence of the defendant in failing to give the usual warning signals, and whether under all circumstances he was guilty of contributory negligence in crossing the track in the manner described. Both instructions we think, were 'properly rejected. These conclusions require an affirmance of the judgment below.

Affirmed.






Dissenting Opinion

Brannon, Judge,

(dissenting).

Very clear it is that the deceased knew well that trains might pass any time, and likely knew when this regular train was due, as he had been working at this spot two months. Very certain it is that he could have seen the train, if he had looked, and likely have heard it. And if the noise prevented hearing, that was still greater the demand to look out. .

And very probable that he stepped on the track when the train was close and visible- — a rash act. If he did not step on the track when train was close, then he committed the rash act of standing on the track not looldng or listening. In any view careless. It seems to me that the court excuses him from all measure of care and prudence, and leaves out of the case contributory negligence of the most signal character. It requires a train to whistle at every party of men repairing track, building bridges or doing other work. I thought that the law required of them care and watchfulness. In this ease the danger was ever present and obvious, easily avoided- — -the negligence of the deceased great.

I hold that to hold the company liable in such a case its negligence must be wanton, and of this there is no proof. It was lawfully using its track, and the deceased upon it.

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