69 W. Va. 228 | W. Va. | 1911
Tire verdict and judgment below, on appeal, by defendant, from the judgment of a justice, was for three hundred dollars, interest and costs, damages alleged to have been sustained by plaintiff, by the killing by defendant of a pair of mules astray on its railway tracks.
All questions of error presented are covered by defendant’s motion, denied by the court below, to set aside the verdict and grant it a new trial.
The sole question is, was the law properly applied, and the verdict warranted bjr the facts proven? The complaint was that defendant negligently ran over and killed the mules, in the early morning of January 18, 1909. The facts proven are, that plaintiff owned and operated a coal mine on the Loop Creek branch of defendant’s railway, in Fayette County. It employed mules and kept them in its stable, located on the side of the railway opposite tile mine, and from seventy to ninety feet distant therefrom, and about three hundred feet west of a pirblic road crossing the track, and about four hundred feet west of a curve in the track going up the creek. The stable and any object on the track opposite it could be seen in the day time by trainmen, after rounding the curve going west. The mine was usually reached from the stable by following a road way along the defendant’s right of way leading to the public road, and then crossing over the track on the public road. Sometimes, however, drivers crossed the track directly opposite the stable. On this morning, Roach had gone to the stable, a little after seven o’clock, gotten the mules, and had started to the mine in the usual way, but was called back by the stable boss to take along another team of mules for another driver, who was late. Roach left his mules, unguarded and unhitched, standing in front of the stable, while he went around on the side of the stable to get his dinner bucket and lamp. Left alone as they were, the mules went directly to the track, got on it and started up the track in the direction of the public road and the approaching engine, when they were almost instantly hit and killed -by the locomotive, in charge
In our view of this evidence it wholly fails to make out a case of negligence, and liability on the part of the defendant company. In what particular does it show defendant negligent? The testimony of the plaintiffs own witnesses is that the mules went directly from the stable onto the track, and in front of the engine, and were struck within fifteen to fifty feet from the place where they got on the track. Even if the trainmen could have seen, or did see the mules in front of the stable, or going in the direction of the track, they may have thought, as did witness Cumbo, who was within fifty feet of them, that they were in charge of the driver, and would be taken care of; and that plaintiff’s own servants, standing at the stable, in plain sight of the approaching engine, would not allow them to go upon the track and be killed. We judicially know that it is still dark at 6:45 or 7:00 o’clock a. m. in the month of January, We are persuaded also that the light and smoke from the coke ovens, and the miners’ lights, were well calculated to confuse and obscure the vision of the trainmen at that early hour. It would be carrying the doctrine of negligence very far, we think, to hold the defendant liable on this evidence. We think the case one of inevitable accident, and that it is controlled in its facts, and the legal principles applicable, by Toudy v. Norfolk & W. R. Co., 38 W. Va. 694; Lovejoy v. C. & O. Ry. Co., 41 W. Va. 693, and other cases The rules and principles of these cases require a reversal of the judgment below, and the awarding of a new trial to defendant.
It is urged by the defendant that, as the court below denied
Reversed and Remanded.