62 W. Va. 562 | W. Va. | 1907
The demurrer to the plaintiff’s declaration was overruled by the court below, and its action thereon is not challenged here. The plaintiff, a day-laborer employed by defendant in the construction of its railroad, in an action on the case, seeks recovery of damages for injuries sustained by him on the evening of May 23, 1906, in leaping from a flat-car of the construction train on which he was being carried by the defendant from his place of work to his boarding house. Along the line of the railroad was a derrick used in lifting stone, supported by two large wire guy-ropes stretched over the track. The derrick had been there for some time, and the construction train had safely passed and repassed under these ropes many times. But on the outward trip on the day of the injury, the train was flagged before reaching the derrick; and the conductor, who went forward to learn the cause,' on returning announced, in the presence of the plaintiff and others on the flat-car, that the guy-ropes were too low; but after a delay of only a few moments the train passed on under the ropes without further interruption. The trouble occurred at the derrick in returning in the evening of the same day. The train was moving backward, the engine pushing the flat-car, which passed safely under the first rope; but this rope was caught by the cab of the engine, pulling down the derrick and causing the second rope to fall upon and sweep across the top of the flat-car, and, in order to
The evidence is very incomplete and unsatisfactory — in not showing to whom the derrick belonged, how it was or had been employed, -more of the particulars regarding the delay of the train in the afternoon of the day of the accident, how and by whom the ropes were elevated so as to allow the train to pass under them, in whose charge the derrick was, and what provision the defendant had made to keep its track clear at this point. The plaintiff evidently relied on proof of the obstruction alone’ as making out a case of presumptive negligence, regarding the other matters as defensive in nature. It is not general^ true, however, as between master and servant, that negligence is imputed from the circumstances alone of injury due to defective appliances of machinery; but, as a general rule, some affirmative acts of negligence, either of omission or commission, must be shown. Minty v. Railroad Co., 4 L. R. A. 409; Wood Mast. & Serv., section 382; Railway Co. v. Ledbetter, 34 Kan. 326; Dobbins v. Brown, 119 N. Y. 188; 2 Labatt, Mast. & Serv., sections 833, 835.
After the plaintiff had introduced evidence of the nature and cause of, and how he received his injuries, developing the facts substantially as stated, the court sustained the defendant’s motion to strike out his evidence and direct a verdict in its favor. The only question presented here is, was this action of the court erroneous ? It is said by Judge Holt in Robinson v. Railroad Co., 40 W. Va. 585: “If there is no evidence in any fairly appreciable degree tending to prove-defendant’s negligence, then the' court, on motion, should instruct the jury to find for the defendant; and the court must decide when the case calls for such instruction, for to-that extent it is a question of law arising out of the testimony; but if in the opinion of the court the evidence tends in a fairly appreciable degree, not by a mere scintilla, to prove negligence on the part of the defendant, then the-
Whether the evidence of the plaintiff comes within the rule of these cases depends upon the question whether the suspension of these cables over the track, so low at the time of the accident as to constitute an obstruction, of itself speaks a prima facie case of negligence, tending with the other evidence to support in an appreciable degree the plaintiff’s case. It is familiar law that the obligation to provide the servant a reasonably safe place to work is a non-assignable duty, breach of which, though delegated to another, will render the master liable. Such a reasonably safe place to work has been extended, with respect to railroads, to the entire track over which the servant is required to pass in discharge of his duties. Flannegan v. Railway Co., 40 W. Va. 436; McCreery v. Railroad Co., 43 W. Va. 112; Jackson v. Railroad Co., 43 W. Va. 380; and we see no reason for excepting railroads under construction.
This position does not violate the general rule, in the case of master and servant, requiring specific evidence which fairly tends to show the employer guilty of negligence. “The rule does not imply that it is only from direct evidence that the master’s culpability can be inferred. The burden of proof is satisfied by the production of circumstantial evidence.” 2 Labatt Mast. & Serv., section 835. Does not the suspension of wire cables across a railroad track so low as to obstruct the track and passage of a train, or leaving them so dangerously insecure as to be liable to become an obstruction and a nuisance, unexplained, actually obstructing the track but a short time before injury results, constitute per se negligence? This Court has so held, and we think rightfully, in McCreery v. Railway Co., supra, and substantially also in Flannegan v. Railway Co. and Robinson v. Railway Co., supra. The courts of other states so hold. Stoltenberg v. Railroad Co., 165 Pa. 377; Railway Co. v. Delaney, 22 Tex. 427; Thomas v. Telegraph Co., 100 Mass. 156. Labatt, Mast. & Serv., section 836, says: “ But while the plaintiff is
The plaintiff was entitled to have his evidence go to the jury; and the motion to exclude it and direct a verdict for defendant was improperly sustained. We therefore reverse the judgment, set aside the verdict, and award the plaintiff a new trial.
Reversed. Mew Trial Granted.'