77 W. Va. 305 | W. Va. | 1915
In this action, commenced by W. E. McCreary before a justice, against the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Company, to recover damages for the killing of a horse by defendant’s train near Tuckahoe in Greenbrier county July 8, 1910, plaintiff obtained in the circuit court the judgment brought here by defendant on writ of error.
The accident occurred near the western portal of a tunnel on defendant’s line of railroad. No one saw the injury inflicted ; and only two witnesses testified on the trial, the plaintiff in his own behalf, the engineer for defendant. "Whether the engine collided with the horse while in the tunnel, or immediately after it passed the portal, is a question left in doubt by the proof on that subject, and not material. The animal killed escaped from the pasture field, and “went up. by the depot and got on the railroad track”. So plaintiff testified, as he also did that “the railroad at that place between the station at Tuckahoe and Allegheny has a tunnel possibly a mile long, or nearly a mile, which is absolutely straight. There is a curve, a little bit of a curve, coming into the station at Tuckahoe. I do not know what degree. But on ordinary occasions I believe the railroad people could have saved my horse. The fact is the agent knew it, and.I expected him to be here, but I would not continue the case. He knew the horse was on the track, and he does not say he had time to get him off, or didn’t, and I believe the railroad owes me for this horse. * * * They have no fence or anything to keep the horse off. I turned him out on my place. * * * The horse was killed very close to the mouth of the tunnel. * * You can see from the east end of the Allegheny tunnel to the west end. I do not say you could see a horse standing in the mouth of the tunnel, but when the smoke is not in that tunnel you can see through very easily. You can see the signal I believe right above the station. I think you can see that before you go out of the tunnel; the railroad witness will tell you that”.
From what source the information was obtained on which was based the statement that defendant’s station agent knew the horse was on the track, or, if he did know, whether he
Long, the engineer in charge of the train that caused the injury, testified for defendant that the first section of the' westbound fast freight train (his being the second), having preceded him less than an hour before the injury occurred, had filled the tunnel with smoke, thus preventing him from seeing any obstruction on the track while therein or near the western portal, and that consequently he did not see and could not have seen the horse in time to avoid the accident. To use his own language: “Nothing unusual happened from Clifton Forge until I got to the west end of Allegheny tunnel, which is just east of Tuckahoe, about 125 yards, to the best of my knowledge. Gravel and rocks were flying against the windows of my cab, and I smelled hair, which you can always smell when you hit stock, and I applied my air brakes and emergency and stopped as soon as I could. I suppose I ran about 12 box car lengths of about 36 feet when I stopped, and
If it could reasonably be said that the testimony of plaintiff himself made out a prima facie case of negligence, a conclusion we do not deem’ justified by the facts detailed by him, the testimony introduced by the defendant clearly negatives the fact of negligence.
Indeed, defendant in error does not seriously contend that the evidence is sufficient to sustain the verdict and the judgment rendered thereon. In the main, he addresses his argument to the right of appeal from the judgment of the justice to the circuit court, defendant not having appeared before the justice except to ask for an appeal and tender the requisite bond therefor. As this right was not challenged in the trial court, defendant in error confines Ms citations of authority to the inquiry whether he may here for the first time question the jurisdiction of the lower court.
Conceding for the purposes of this case the appropriateness of that procedure, we can not acquiesce in the conclusion, reached by defendant in error, that a failure to appear, plead and participate in a trial before a justice precludes appeal to the circuit court by a defendant against whom judgment is rendered by such officer. Since the enactment of §163, ch. 50, Code, whereon he bases his argument, providing that “in all cases an appeal shall lie, under the regulations herein, from the judgment of a justice to the circuit court of the county,
We are therefore of opinion to reverse the judgment, and remand the case for new trial.
Reversed, and new trial awarded.