84 W. Va. 368 | W. Va. | 1919
Plaintiff, a minor nineteen years of age suing by next friend for damages on account of a personal injury, caused by the alleged negligence of a fellow servant, recovered judgment against the defendant by w]iom he was employed as a common laborer, and it is prosecuting this writ of error.
Defendant is a corporation engaged in producing natural gas and transporting it -through pipe lines to its customers both within and without the state and is, therefore, engaged in both intrastate and interstate commerce. It does not maintain separate pipe lines for the two kinds of commerce, but, transports the gas for both domestic and foreign consumption through the same lines to certain points where so much as: is intended for use within the state is carried from the maim line, by means of lateral lines, to the places of consumption. Its commercial business is, therefore, so mingled as not to be clearly distinguishable, the domestic from the foreign. It employed plaintiff about the digging of a ditch about two and a half or three miles in length, preparatory to laying a pipé line from its compressor station at Clarence, to connect with the main line leading from that point to Ravenswood on the Ohio River. This new line was parallel to the main line already existing and was intended to increase defendant’s carrying capacity between the same points. The main line supplied gas to the towns of Ripley and Ravenswood in West Virginia, and what was not consumed by these towns was turned over at Ravenswood to the Ohio Fuel Supply Company for consumption in Ohio, and was measured in the line as it flowed through the station. Defendant ceased to pay its quota or assessment into the Workmen’s Compensation Fund in April, 1915, and was in default at the time of plaintiff’s injury which occurred on the 6th of the following August.
The first error defendant assigns is the overruling of its de.murrer to plaintiff’s first and second amended declarations. .Its counsel insist that the original declaration avers plaintiff’s injury was received while he was working on a pipe which was msed in both interstate and intrastate commerce, and because the two were inseparable, stated no cause of action, defendant ■in such case not being liable for an injury caused by the negligence of a fellow servant, citing Barnett v. Coal & Coke Ry. Co., 81 W. Va. 251, and Suttle v. Hope Natural Gas Co., 82 W. Va. 729, 97 S. E. 429, whereas, in his two amended declarations he averred his injury was received while he was engaged in work for the defendant, which was wholly intrastate, thus, -as counsel insist, departing from the original cause of action, ■citing Findley v. Coal & Coke Ry. Co., 76 W. Va. 747. Each •of the amended declarations, which are not materially different in substance, states a good cause of action, and the de.murrers thereto were properly overruled. Objection on the .ground that the amendment constituted a departure from the •original cause of action, or because it introduced a new and •different cause of action, was not made, and the question does
The next complaint is, that the court improperly overruled
“I want to call the court’s attention to the fact that I am just informed that an employee of the United Fuel Gas Company, thé defendant in this suit, has a list of jurors at this time, and has been insisting on their going to his home, and wanting them to say what they think of the United Fuel Gas Company, and what they think of the case now on trial; and this is not all, there are other things being done that are improper.”
Counsel'insist that such statement was extremely prejudicial, and was made for the purpose of inducing the jury to believe that defendant, through its agents, was endeavoring in some improper manner to influence them to render a verdict in its favor, and thereby to cause a revulsion in their minds from defendant and render them less capable of considering the case fairly and impartially. We do not hesitate to express our disapproval of such conduct on the part of counsel. It was highly improper and unprofessional, and, so far as the record discloses, was wholly without justification or excuse. But it is not just that litigants should be-made to suffer for the indecorous remarks and unprofessional conduct of their counsel, and unless the court can see that the jury were in fact improperly swayed or influenced thereby, it is not cause for reversal. The trial court, by a proper instruction to the jury told them to disregard said remarks and not to allow their minds to be influenced thereby, but to decide the case impartially, solely according to the evidence, and did all in its power to correct the wrong. State v. Huff, 80 W. Va. 468; State v. Alie, 82 W. Va. 601, 96 S. E. 1011; and 4 Encyc. L. & P., 451.
■ Because there was no conflict in the evidence respecting the character of business in which defendant was engaged, or in the character of work in which plaintiff was employed at the time of his injury, counsel insist that the question whether defendant was subject to the Workmen’s Compensation Act was one of law for the court and was, therefore, erroneously submitted to the jury. Generally- it is error to submit unmixed questions of law to the jury for their decision, but if the court does so, and the jury happens to decide them correctly, a party is not thereby prejudiced and cannot complain, Runnion v. Morrison, 71 W. Va. 254.
Defendant’s default being admitted, and the other facts submitted to the jury by the instructions being proven and not denied, the real question presented was one of unmixed law for the court, which is this: Was the work of digging the ditch preparatory to laying a new pipe line which was to become, when completed, a part of defendant’s transportation system, a work that is clearly separable and distinguishable from its interstate work? The question is answered by previous decisions of this court. Suttle v. Hope Natural Gas Co.,
In construing the Federal Employer’s Liability Act to determine whether an employe was, at the time of his injury, engaged in interstate transportation, the Supreme Court of the-United States holds that the test is: “Was the employe at the-time of the injury engaged in transportation, or in work SO' closely related to it as to be practically a part of it.” Shanks v. Delaware &c R. R. Co., 239 U. S. 556. New York Cent. R. R. Co. v. White, 243 U. S. 188. In the Shanks Case it appears-that he was employed in a railroad macMne shop, and his-work generally consisted in repairing certain parts of locomotives wMch were used in both intrastate and interstate transportation, but on the day of Ms injury he was solely engaged in taking down and putting into a new position an overhead shaft, one of the shop fixtures, and it was held he was not then engaged in interstate transportation witMn the meaning of the act. In the WMte Case, plaintiff’s intestate was a night-watchman in the employ of the railroad company,, and Ms duty was to guard tools and materials intended for use in the construction of a new station and new tracks upon a line of interstate railroad. He received an injury which resulted in Ms death, wMle performing Ms prescribed duties, and the court held that although the fact was admitted that the new station and tracks were designed for use in interstate commerce when fmished, it did not bring the case within the Federal Employer’s Liability Act. This case is very similar to the one under consideration. The differnce between the character of the construction work in the two cases does not differentiate them. In Bravis v. Chicago &c. R. R. Co., 217 Fed. 234, a case decided by the Circuit Court of Appeals, the rule is thus stated: ‘ ‘ An employe engaged in the construction of a bridge, 600 feet distant from a railroad, on a cut-off more than a mile in length, wMch had never been provided with rails or used as a railroad, is not employed in interstate commerce, although his employer is so engaged and intends to use the cut-off therein when completed.”
The next point on wMch counsel rely is the alleged error in
It is useless to cite authorities for the proposition that $2,500 is not an excessive verdict for the loss of an eye.
Our conclusion is to affirm the judgment.
Affirmed