59 W. Va. 419 | W. Va. | 1906
This action of trespass on the case was instituted by James Hanley, administrator of Mrs. Catherine N. Rabbett, against the West Virginia Central and Pittsburg Railway Company, in the circuit court of Randolph county. The plaintiff avers that he is entitled to recover $10,000 damages for the death of Mrs. Rabbett, caused by the explosion of the boiler of a railroad locomotive in use by the defendant upon its tracks in the city of Elkins; and.that by the explosion the boiler was rent asunder, and a large piece of the metal thereof hurled upon the residence of Mrs. Rabbett, crashing through it and striking her, inflicting severe and fatal injuries, from which she died. Plaintiff also avers that the explosion was produced by the defective and unsafe condition of the boiler, and by mismanagement by the servants of the defendant. Upon trial before a jury, a motion to exclude all of the plaintiff’s evidence and to direct a verdict for defendant was sustained, and the action dismissed. Upon petition of plaintiff, a writ of error was allowed to the judgment.
Defendant contends that plaintiff is barred of a recovery, regardless of his assignments of error, because he offered no evidence to show his due appointment and qualification as administrator. The authority for an action of this kind is found in sections 5 and 6, chapter 103, Code, which in part provide: “Whenever the death of a person shall be caused by wrongful act, neglect or default, and the act, neglect or default is such as would (if death had not ensued) have entitled the party injured to maintain an action to recover damages in respect thereof; then, and in every such case, the person who, or the corporation which, would have been liable if death had not ensued, shall be liable to an action for damages, notwithstanding the death of the person injured, and although the death shall have been caused under such circumstances as amount in law to murder in the first or second degree, or manslaughter.
The plea entered in this action was not guilty. There was no plea of ne ungues administrator. The question is: Does the plea to the merits admit the representative character in which the plaintiff sues? Some of the early cases and authorities hold that, where an administrator or executor sues upon a cause of action arising in his own time and not in the time of the decedent, a plea to the merits does not admit the representative character in which the plaintiff sues; and that the plaintiff, notwithstanding such plea, must make proof of such character. 2 Lomax Executors 612-613; 2 Greenleaf Ev. section 338. This early doctrine seems never to have had the assent of all the early cases. See Watson v. King, 4 Campb. 272, and Loyd v. Finlayson, 2 Esp. 564. It seems that necessity for proof of the representative character was never required after a plea to the merits, except where the cause of action arose in the time of the representative, and the representative might maintain the action in his own name without designating his representative character. Denver etc. Ry. Co. v. Woodward, 4 Col. 1. The tendency of the latest and best considered cases in America is to make no distinction between cases upon causes of action arising in the time of the decedent, and cases upon causes of action arising in the time of the representative, and to hold in all cases that a plea to the merits admits the representative character in which the plaintiff sues. 18 Cyc. 994-6, notes 64 and 65. Whether this be the correct view or not, our case of McDonald v. Cole, 46 W. Va. 186, lays down the rule, without limitation or qualification, that “where one sues as executor or administrator, or in other representative character, there need be no proof of his appointment or authority unless a plea denies it. A plea to the merits admits the right of the plaintiff to sue as he does.” It is true, that case was upon a cause of action arising in the time of the decedent, but the rule mentioned seems to have been announced as general. The opinion in that case says that the plea ne ungues, etc., is a plea in abatement. If that be true and applicable to all cases, then defendant’s contention here must fail for want of such plea. It seems to us that the defendant’s position cannot be maintained for the reason, also, that section 6, chapter
Defendant also contends that the plaintiff cannot recover because of a variance between the averments of the declaration and the proof. The exact point of variance claimed is this: The declaration avers that a large piece of metal of the exploded boiler struck Mrs. Rabbett, inflicting severe and fatal injuries, etc. Mrs. Boyd, the only witness on this point, says: “It was the timbers that struck Mrs.'Rabbett. I can’t remember very clearly, it was such a crash that I don’t remember much about it, and at that time I was knocked down myself, and she was lying under the table.” It will be observed that the alleged variance does not relate to the cause of the injury, or to the manner in which it was produced, but solely to the instrument with which it was inflicted. If the timbers from the house, loosened by the piece of boiler, instead of the piece of boiler, struck Mrs. Rabbett, still the primary cause of the injury is the same. It is contended that no connection is shown between the timbers which struck Mrs. Rabbett and the piece of boiler. There may be no direct evidence showing' the connection, but circumstances and facts are shown from which the connection may legitimately be inferred; and the plaintiff, upon the
We will now consider the assignments of error made by the plaintiff. Plaintiff complains because the lower court sustained objections to numerous questions propounded to his witnesses. These questions are embodied in twelve several bills of exceptions. From these bills, it appears that the questions were not answered, and that no statement was made during the trial of what plaintiff expected to prove by the answers to these questions. When the bills of exceptions were signed by the judge in vacation, after the judgment was entered and the term adjourned, the plaintiff’s attorney stated to the judge what he expected to prove by such answers, and his statement is incorporated in the bills. It also appears, by a separate bill of exceptions, that after the motion to exclude plaintiff’s evidence and direct a verdict for defendant had been sustained, and before the jury had returned its verdict, the plaintiff moved the court to allow him to recall the witnesses to whom said questions had been propounded, for the purpose of taking their statements as to what they would have testified had the objections not been sustained, which motion to recall the witnesses was denied. No statement of what plaintiff expected to prove by the witnesses was made at the time of the motion to recall them. It is contended that the said questions, taken with the facts appearing, show that the questions were relevant to the issue and proper in form; that therefore the answers need not appear; and that
(1) “State what was the condition of this engine, prior to these repairs that rendered it necessary to make these repairs?” (2) “State the condition of the stays and bolts in the piece of the boiler shell of engine No. 19, lying in the house of deceased, I mean soon after this accident. State whether you were able to determine whether or not the stays were recently broken, or whether they or some of them had been broken before the explosion?” (3) “State whether you observed the number, location and condition of the bolts or parts of bolts that were in this part of the boiler shell, and if so what was the condition thereof?” (4) “In your examination of the bolts and stay-bolts in the part of the jacket, or shell, that was in the house of Mrs. Rabbett, did you observe and can you state whether said bolts or stay-bolts were, or any of them were, recently broken by force of the explosion, or whether they had been previously broken; if so, the condition and appearance of said bolts?” (5) “ State whether or not any of those bolts, where they connected to the boiler shell, were broken off by you, and if so, state how you did it?” (6) “State whether or not these exposed ends were bright, and bore the appearance of new metal exposed, or whether those ends were discolored, either by corrosion or any other cause?” (7) “That afternoon (Oct. 21st, 1903), state to the jury whether that engine boiler (No. 19) wasin ordinary good workingorder or not?” (8) “State whether as conductor of the crew having engineNo.19 in charge on the afternoon of said explosion, and a few minutes before the explosion, you notified the Superintendent of the Railroad Shops of the defendant that said engine and boiler was out of repair and refused to operate properly, and if' so, what was said or done by said Superintendent?” (9) “If you examined or observed the condition of the stays and bolts, with which the jacket of said boiler had been fastened, and observed whether said bolts appeared to have been recently broken, or whether some of them bore the appearance of having been broken or severed prior to the explosion of the boiler, — please state how many and what the condition of the said bolts appeared to be?” 10. “If you examined the
Question (1) was propounded to witness J. W. Poling-, whose former occupation was boiler making and whose present occupation is plumbing. This witness worked on repairs to this particular locomotive. The repairs referred to were made three or four years before the witness testified, when he was an apprentice boy, and at a time when he could not be said to have possessed the expert knowledge necessary to qualify him to speak as to"the condition of the locomotive. Questions (7) and (8) were propounded to a railroad yard conductor, who was not shown to have had any expert knowledge as to the nature and construction of a locomotive engine and boiler; and while it was proper to prove by him what he did as conductor, having in control this locomotive and its crew, as indicated in question (8), it was not proper, without a showing of expert knowledge on his part, to prove by him whether or not the engine was in good working order. McKelvey v. C. & O. R. Ry. Co., 35 W. Va. 500. The obiec-tions to questions (l) and (7) should have been sustained, even if the plaintiff had stated what he expected to prove by answers to them. The other questions mentioned relate to the condition and appearance of the piece of boiler at the residence of Mrs. Rabbett as to pits, rust holes, etc., and to the condition of the stays or bolts in such piece of boiler and their appearance as to recent breaks or otherwise. The
The plaintiff complains of the rejection of the deposition of W. W. Ensign, taken in Pittsburg,' Pa. This deposition appears in full by bill of exceptions. The court at first admitted the deposition, and afterwards, upon objections to the several questions and answers thereof, sustained the objections and rejected the deposition. The defendant made certain general objections to the reading of the whole deposition: first, that it is not under the seal of the.notary before whom it was taken. As to this objection, section 33, chapter 130, Code, and Bohn v. Zeigler, 44 W. Va. 402, are in point. Said section 33 provides: “In any pending case the deposition of a witness, whether a party to the suit or not, may, without any commission, be taken in or out of this State by a justice or a notary public, or by a commissioner in chancery, or before any officer authorized to take depositions in the county or state where they may be taken, and if certified under his hand, may be received without proof of the signature of such certificate.” We cannot hold, against the positive terms of this statute, that a deposition which meets the requirements thereof may not be received if otherwise proper.
The second general objection to the deposition is that there was no affidavit that the witness resided out of this State, and that it does not appear from the deposition that the witness did or does now reside out of this State. The deposition shows that the witness resided out of the State when his deposition was taken, on the 14th of January, 1905. It was not
It is contended by defendant that the witness Ensign does not by his evidence show that he is an expert in relation to the nature and construction of locomotive engines and boilers, concerning which he testified. The evidence of this witness shows that he is a mechanical engineer of considerable experience, and when asked, “In the discharge of your duties have you ever had occasion to inspect or do any work on locomotive boilers, and are you acquainted with the mechanism of such boilers?” he replied, “Yes.” This witness appears to be qualified as an expert, although he further says that he never inspected locomotive boilers. The weight to be given to his testimony was for the jury. 2 Elliott on Ev. sections 1038-9, 1052; 17 Gyc. 39. An expert witness may give an opinion, in a proper case, based on his own knowledge of facts disclosed in his testimony; or he may give his opinion upon facts shown in evidence, and assumed in a hypothetical question submitted to him. 2 Elliott on Ev., section 1116. This action is founded on negligence. It is the duty of the plaintiff to show affirmatively that the defendant has been negligent. Negligence will not be presumed alone from the fact that the boiler of the locomotive, in use in lawful business upon the tracks of the defendant, exploded. In this respect, the case is governed by Veith v. Salt Co., supra. See also 3 Elliott on Railroads, section 1299; Texas v. Pac. Ry. Co., 106 U. S. 617. We quote from the evidence of the plaintiff as follows: “I didn’t notice the actual size of the bolts when new and gone in the construction of this boiler but I did notice that they were broken off and half rotted in. ” * * * * “Q. Were there any considerable number and if so about how many of those bolts pulled out or broken out of this shell or jacket of the boiler that was there? A. There was a great many. Q. About how many of such bolts did you observe that were less in size than the uniform size at
The part of the deposition offered which should have been
Reversed. Remanded.