70 W. Va. 538 | W. Va. | 1912
J. G-. McGuire, administrator of Juanita Hunt, recovered a judgment for $2,000 against the Norfolk & Western Railway Company for negligently cansing the death of his intestate, and defendant has brought the case to this Court on writ of error. The principal errors assigned relate to the sufficiency of plaintiff’s evidence to support the verdict, and to the action of the court in refusing to give certain instructions asked for by the defendant.
Plaintiff’s intestate, a child two and a half years old, got upon defendant’s railroad track in the town of Welch, and was killed by an engine and train in charge of defendant’s servants. The record presents these questions, viz: Did the engine crew keep a proper lookout for helpless and irresponsible trespassers on defendant’s tracks, and if not, was their failure to do so the proximate cause of the child’s death? Defendant’s liability depends upon a proper answer to these questions, because it is the well settled law of this state, that the engineer and fireman must keep a reasonable lookout for children and helpless trespassers upon the track. Gunn v. Railroad Co., 42 W. Va. 676; Dempsey v. Railroad Co., 69 W. Va. 271, 71 S. E. 284.
Jim Drown, a'witness for plaintiff, is the only witness who locates definitely the place where the engine was at the time the child came upon the track. He was hauling a load of goods from the depot, and was at a point forty-nine feet from the place where the child was hit by the engine. From his position he could see both the engine and the child, and, seeing the child’s danger, he hallooed to the trainmen, and not attracting their attention, he says he jumped from his wagon and ran to the track to rescue her, and reached it in time to save another child that was on the track about eight or ten feet from the child that was killed. He also succeeded in catching hold of Juanita Hunt’s hand, but not until it was too late to save her. The wheels of the truck caught her. He says that he himself was struck by the cylinder of the engine and thrown down. On the day before the case was tried, he pointed out to W. 0. Morgan,
There is irreconcilable conflict between the testimony of Jim
Plaintiff examined G-. W. Thomas, the engineer, to prove two facts, viz: (1) In what distance he could have stopped his train, and (2) in what distance he did actually stop it, at the time of the accident. His answers to these questions are not inconsistent with the facts testified to by other of plaintiff’s witnesses. But, on cross-examination, he was asked to tell when he first saw the child on the track, nnd all he knew about how she was killed. Many of the facts related by him are contradictory of the facts testified to by Brown and Mathews, and it is insisted by counsel for defendant that plaintiff is bound by that testimony. Such is not the law. By placing the engineer on the stand in his own behalf, plaintiff no doubt vouched his credibility and would not be permitted to -impeach his general character for veracity. Lambert v. Armentrout, 65 W. Va. 375; 30
The court refused an instruction asked for by defendant which would have told the jury that there can be no recovery for the death of an infant of Juanita Hunt’s age, when it appears that the negligence of the custodian of the child contributed to its death. Without going into the intricate question of imputed negligence, about which there is so much conflict in the authorities, we may, nevertheless, say that the instruction was properly refused, in this case, because there is not sufficient evidence to prove that the mother of the child was negligent in permitting it to get upon the railroad track. It does not appear how far the mother lived from the point where the child was killed, nor how long the child had been out of her presence. True, witness Brown does say that he saw her outside of her mother’s yard, at other times, and that Juanita and the other child that he rescued were nearly always together. 'It is scarcely possible that a mother would be able to keep her eye upon her child, all the time, and it would be unreasonable to hold her guilty of negligence for not doing so. Common observation and experience teach us that children of two and a half years of age often get out of the sight of their parents, or custodians, and the fact that Juanita Hunt did, on this occasion, get out of her mother’s sight, and upon the railroad track, is not, of itself, sufficient proof of negligence to warrant the instruction, even if it be the law that the negligence of the custodian of the child is attributable to the child. Dempsey v. Railway Co., supra.; Gunn v. Railroad Co., supra. The child itself was of too tender
The law imposes a greater duty upon railroad companies to keep a lookout for small children trespassing upon its tracks' than it does in case of adult persons in full possession of their faculties. It owes to the former the duty to keep a reasonable lookout for them consistent with the other duties of its employees engaged in the operation of its trains, and if children are discovered upon the tracks, or perilously near the same, the company’s servants are bound to exercise reasonable diligence to avoid injury to them. Defendant’s instruction No. 7 was, therefore, properly refused. By it defendant asked the court to apply the same rule to the infant deceased that the law applies in the case of an adult trespasser.
Defendant’s Ho. 8' was also properly refused. By implication it would limit the duty of keeping a lookout for helpless
Plaintiff’s instruction RTo. 1 is consistent with the law herein stated, and was properly given. It reads: “The Court instructs the jury that if the employes of a railroad company fail to keep a proper lookout consistent with their other duties for helpless trespassers on the track, and thereby such helpless trespassers is negligently killed, such failure is the approximate cause of such killing, and the Company will be liable therefor, notwithstanding the prior negligence with which such helpless trespasser may be on the track.” It is argued by counsel for defendant that the failure to keep a lookout was not the proximate cause of the child’s death but that the failure to stop the engine in time to avoid injury was the proximate cause. The law does not regard so fine a 'distinction. Failure to keep a reasonable lookout is the negligent act established by the evidence. It matters not how diligent the engineer and fireman may have been to stop the train after the child had been discovered, if, by failure to keep a proper lookout, they did not discover her in time to stop before running upon her. If it had been proven to the satisfaction of the jury, that defendant’s servants, by the exercise of reasonable diligence, could not have discovered the child, in a place of danger, in time to have prevented her injury, then, of course, the failure to stop before running upon her would not, alone establish negligence. Logically, running over the child with the engine caused her death, this resulted directly from the failure to stop in time, and the failure to stop in time was due to the fact that the child was not discovered, and finally, the failure to discover her was due to the negligence of those in
The judgment will be affirmed.
, „ Affirmed.