131 S.E. 563 | W. Va. | 1926
The plaintiff, while crossing defendant's tracks at a highway crossing in the Town of Iaeger, was struck by a train operated by the defendant, as a result of which he sustained very severe personal injuries and his automobile was completely destroyed. He brought this action to recover damages for the injuries thus sustained, and from a judgment of the circuit court awarding him compensation therefor, this writ of error is prosecuted.
The highway crosses the tracks at right angles east of the station. Just a short distance east of the crossing the railroad curves around a steep bluff of the mountain, sufficiently to obstruct the view thereof by one approaching the crossing from the direction in which the plaintiff was approaching it. According to the testimony of the plaintiff he had driven into the town on that morning for the purpose of delivering Masonic lodge emblems that he had previously sold to the residents therein. He parked his car about twenty-five or thirty feet to the north of the crossing. After making one delivery he came back to his car, which was pointed toward the crossing, with the intention of going across to the other side of the town to deliver other emblems. He did not know whether there were any trains due or not, nor had he heard any whistle or other signal of any. He got in the car, started the engine and proceeded in low gear down to the crossing at a very slow rate of speed, looking in both directions for approaching trains, and listening for them, but looking more toward the left (the direction from which the train came *682 which struck him) because the view in that direction was not so great. Just before entering upon the track he looked to the right and saw nothing, then looked to the left, and saw the approaching train. The train seemed to be running at an unusual rate of speed, and the plaintiff thinking that he could not make it across the track, his front wheels having only mounted the first rail, stopped his car and put it in reverse in an effort to back off the track, and was moving backwards, when the train struck it. At no point from the time he started his car until he reached the track could he have obtained a better view of the railroad in either direction by stopping.
The negligence charged in the declaration, and relied on for recovery, is that the train doing the injury was running at an unusual rate of speed and that it did not give warning of its approach to the crossing by ringing the bell or sounding the whistle, as required by section 61 of chapter 54 of the Code. This statute provides that the bell shall be rung or the whistle sounded at a distance of at least sixty rods from the place where the railroad crosses any public street or highway, and be kept ringing or whistling for a time sufficient to give due notice of the approach of the train before such street or highway is reached. Divers witnesses testified that the train seemed to be running at an unusual rate of speed that morning. Most of them gave it as their opinion that it was making twenty-five to thirty miles per hour. While the engineer placed the speed at fifteen to eighteen miles per hour, the fireman fixed the speed at "about twenty or twenty-five miles an hour," and said that the engine was not pulling but that the train was "drifting," and had been for a half mile above the crossing.
Under the instructions of the court, in order to find for the plaintiff at all the jury were required to find that the statutory crossing signal was not given, so that the jury's verdict necessarily found that the whistle was not blown nor the bell rung, when the crossing was approached. The plaintiff introduced a great number of witnesses, all of whom swear that no crossing signal was given. The town sergeant, who met all trains at the station, said that he heard it blow *683
for the station over a mile away and that it did not whistle again until it gave the "cattle whistle" on sighting the plaintiff on the crossing. One witness, who was walking up the track and met the train at the place it should have given the crossing signal testifies to its failure to do so and remarked to his companion concerning this fact. Another witness who was expecting the arrival of a friend on that train was intently listening and heard nothing but the station signal and later the distress signal. A woman who lived near the crossing signal post said that she went to the door as the train went by to see if any of her children were down about the railroad, that the train did not blow for the crossing and that she said to one present, "I wonder why it didn't blow," and that then she heard it blow the danger signal. Others testified in like strain. On the contrary the engineer, fireman and others testified that the whistle was blown for the crossing. From the evidence we cannot say that the finding of the jury is not supported by the evidence. To undertake to do so would be to invade the province of the jury. Kelly v. K. M. Ry. Co.,
The defense insisted upon is that the plaintiff was negligent in approaching and entering upon the crossing — guilty of contributory negligence. He who would rely on this defense to defeat recovery must prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, the fact of negligence, and that it was the proximate cause of the injury. Carnefix v. Railroad Co., supra; Carrico v.Railroad Co.,
The defendant would have the court declare as a matter of law that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, and that the court erred in refusing its instruction to that *684 effect, upon the ground that he came upon the crossing in full view of the approaching train, which could have been seen by the plaintiff from a point ten feet from the crossing as he approached it, for a distance of at least three to four hundred feet. Defendant rests its claim as to this being the distance solely upon certain photographs introduced on the trial and the testimony of the photographer who took them.
We are asked to disregard plaintiff's evidence, as well as that of the defendant's engineer, as contrary to the actual fact as to the distance the train could be seen. In other words, the photographs are relied on as unimpeachable evidence. In Cunningham v. Fair Haven W. R. Co.,
The photographs are admitted in evidence on the principle that "diagrams, drawings, and photographs are resorted to only because the witness cannot with language as clearly convey to the minds of the court and jury the scene as the light printed it on the retina of his own eye at the time of which he is testifying." Jones Ev. § 581. They are dependent for their convincingness upon the skill of the person making them and the truthfulness of the one vouching for them. Lake Erie Ry. Co. v.Wilson,
In the absence of proof of any measurement, it is obvious that the photographer's testimony on this point, would be on the same plane with that of the plaintiff and engineer — none basing their opinion on actual measurement. At the best it can only be said, if at all, that measurement might be inferred from the facts actually stated by the witness. This would be only a permissible deduction which the jury is entitled to draw from the evidence, and which has no probative effect, other than the jury is pleased to give it. Puget Sound Elec. Ry. Co. v. Benson, 253 F. 710. Nothing in the nature of this case or the surrounding circumstances can legally screen the defendant from the effect of the rule which jurisprudence applies to litigants who fail to produce important testimony easily within their reach, and presumably under their control. Thus, a conflict of testimony was made on this point *686
for jury determination. According to the principles we have announced the question as to what weight should be given to a photograph after its verification and admission in evidence is a matter for the jury. Wetherell v. Hollister,
On appeal, the reviewing court must take the view of the evidence most favorable to the verdict, and give it the strongest probative force of which it will admit.Rogers v. Phillips,
In approaching a railroad crossing the injured party is not deemed guilty of contributory negligence because he did not exercise the greatest degree of diligence which he could have exercised, but only if he failed to exercise such care as a prudent man approaching such a place would. Whether he ought to stop in a given case is a question for the jury to decide, in view of the circumstances developed. City of Elkins v. RailwayCo.,
We are firmly bound to the doctrine that when the evidence is conflicting, and there are different inferences that may be drawn by different minds, the question of contributory negligence of the injured party is one for the jury.Carnefix v. R. R. Co., supra; City of Elkins v. Railway, supra;Hicks v. R. Co.,
It is urged that three several instructions were improperly given for the plaintiff, and that one, aside from the one directing a verdict which has already been adverted to, was improperly refused for the defendant. These instructions have been carefully examined. We find no error in the instructions given for the plaintiff. They state the law applicable to the case from his viewpoint. The principles contained in the one refused for the defendant were embodied in others given at its instance, wherein the question of contributory negligence was fully and properly submitted to the jury.
It follows from what we have said that the judgment of the circuit court must be affirmed.
Affirmed.