57 W. Va. 333 | W. Va. | 1905
Annie S. Ray, a child of ten years, was struck and killed by a train of the Chesapeake and Ohio railroad while she was crossing the railroad tracks at a ' street crossing in the town of Milton, and her administrator brought an action in the circuit court of Cabell' county against the railroad company, and recovered a verdict and judgment for $2,-900.00 damages.
The company assigns it as error that the demurrer to the declaration was not sustained. The only question which is here worth considering, or is relied upon by counsel, arises on two of the four counts. It is urged that those two counts are bad because they show no duty on the part of the 'company. to Annie Ray, since they do not state whether she was a passenger on the train, an employee, a licensee or a trespasser. Though the first count says that the railroad crosses a public street called Smith street, strangely enough it does not show what the street has to do with the case. It does not say that the child was struck while passing along the street. It simply avers that the defendant so carelessly and negligently managed the train that it struck the child. Though it does not say that the child was struck while on the street and crossing the track, as was the case, yet if she was struck anywhere, on the street or elsewhere, by reason of negligent running of the train, the liability exists. If a train kills a tresspasser on its track, by negligence, it is liable. The count avers that the train was pursuing the track,
The second assignment of error is that the court allowed oral evidence to prove that Smith street had been used by the public as a public street, the claim of the plaintiff, under two counts of the declaration, being that the child was passing along that street and crossing the railroad, and was there struck by the train, and that the defendant did not blow the whistle or ring the bell for alarm as required by statute at public streets. The defendant contends that to come under this statute the records of the town council must be adduced to show it to be a public street. For this contention we are cited to Childrey v. Huntington, 34 W. Va. 466; Boyd v. Woolwine, 40 W. Va. 283; King v. Talbott, 32 Id. 6; Ball v. Cox, 29 Id. 401. Those cases do not apply to the case in
Another alleged error is based on the reading from the Code and books of reported cases by counsel of the plaintiff in argument before the jury. Counsel distinctly call upon us to say whether it is not error to allow counsel to read law to the jury against objection. The subject has been much discussed in Bloyd v. Pollock, 27 W. Va. 75; Ricketts v. C. & O. Ry. Co. 33 Id. 433; Gregory v. O. R. R. Co., 37 Id. 606. As stated in the Gregory Case reading law from law books to the jury is very dangerous, and should not be indulged. So many books and decisions are read, of such diverse statement and conclusion, some good law, some bad, some not pertinent to the case, and misapplied to the facts, and at the close of the argument the law of the case is “confusion worse confounded.” How can the most intelligent jury solve the riddle? The safer course is not to read law to the jury. As in this case it may entail reversal. The court has full power to refuse to allow it. It consumes time and lengthens trials. Attorneys should argue and apply the
But this does not end the trouble. The attorney read long, confusing recitals of facts from decided cases. For what purpose? From Omaha v. Morgan, a long recital of the facts of that case — nothing but a recital of facts. What had they to do with this case except to confuse the jury? Was it intended to similarize the two cases? This was not admissible. It is purely evidentiary matter, which everybody concedes to be not allowable, because a jury must try a case by, and only, by its own evidence. The facts had little or no similarity with the case before the jury. So far as they had, it was improper; if they had not, then it was improper for that
For reasons stated above as to Smith street being a street, we think defendant’s instructions 8 and 9 bad, -as they say that user will not make a street, but only record acceptance of dedication. In any view, under all circumstances of the case, they were inapt and misleading. Judgment reversed, verdict set aside, new trial awarded, case remanded.
Beversed.