40 W. Va. 583 | W. Va. | 1895
William Robinson, plaintiff’s intestate, was a locomotive engineer on defendant’s railroad, running from Weston south to Braxton C. H., and bad been for three years next preceding the lamentable accident which caused his death, on the 10th day of December, 1892. On that day he started to run engine No. 1 and twelve empty freight cars from Weston to Sutton. At the Bendale sixteen degree curve, one and one-half miles from the starting point, while running at the forbidden rate of speed of about twenty miles an hour, the train and four cars left the track, killing the engineer Robinson, and crippling badly his fireman, William Byers.
There was evidence tending to show that on this curve, at or near where the train ran off on the outer side, the rail on that side was not higher than the inner rail.
There was a verdict for the plaintiff for four thousand dollars. A motion for a new trial was overruled, judgment rendered on the verdict, and from that judgment this writ of error was awarded.
It is the personal duty of the railroad company, no matter by whom it may be or is to be directly performed, to provide a reasonably proper and safe railroad track, machinery, and other suitable means and appliances, and maintain and keep them thus reasonably- safe, and also reasonably fit and proper fellow servants. The servant takes upon himself the risks incident to the employment. A servant having knowledge of danger about him must use diligence and care in protecting himself from harm, and not willfully encounter dangers which are known to him. Neither can he recover if his injury was the direct result of his own disobedience of orders. In the case given, the mere fact of the accident creates no presumption of negligence on the part of the company. That must be done by affirmative testimony, and the burden of such proof is on the plaintiff; and, if it thereby
■The contention of the plaintiff is that the verdict is justified because it was made to appear that the railroad company failed to provide the decedent with a reasonably safe and-proper engine, or a reasonably safe and proper track, at the Bendale curve. The defendant contends that plaintiff fails-to make out his case on either ground, or to show by evidence, in any fairly appreciable degree of convincing effect, that defendant was negligent in any respect, and to put the cause of the accideut or how it occurred on any ground higher than mere conjecture; and that conceding this to be the proven cause, then it appears by the uncontradicted testimony of his fellow sen ants who were on the train, that he ran it on this sharp curve, which he well knew, at a speed of twenty miles an hour, whereas he was warned of the character of the curve, and expressly told by those whose duty it was to command, to be careful and not run it (the Bendale curve) at a higher speed than about eight miles an hour.
2. Was the accident caused by an unsafe track at Ben-dale curve? It is a sixteen degree curve; that is, one with a radius of three hundred and fifty eight feet. Is such a curve, on such a road, at an exceptionally sharp degree, negligence per se? We are not so informed by any testimony in the cause; and it is not matter of general knowledge, especially when the company, as in this case, puts its finger on ■the very place, telling the engineer: “Run slow here; do not exceed the rate of eight miles.” So the rules of the company prescribed. The decedent was an engineer on the road of two or three years’ standing, and knew the curve well, and it was his duty to use diligence and care to protect himself from harm.
But it is said the outer rail is not five inches higher than the inner one, as it should be, and this, in so sharp a curve, caused the accident. Op this point plaintiff introduced the testimony of a civil engineer of some railroad experience
The assistant superintendent, a man of eighteen years experience in such matters, was on the ground as soon as he could get there; about the first one from Weston on the ground. He says: “I examined everything connected with it, so as to form an opinion as to the cause of the accident. The broken parts of the wheels were some ten or twelve feet from where the wheels left the track, so that the flanges seemed to have broken after the wheels were off the rails. There were no flaws in the wheels. The engine was all right. She had gone through a severe test. Had run nearly one hundred yards against the rocks. My theory was that the train had left the track on account of something being on it, or that the engineer had been running at a very rapid rate of speed, and the momentum caused the train to run too fast. It was regarded as being a severe curve and on that account we prescribed extra rules on slow running there, and considered it necessary that a train should run slowly there, not only on account of the curve, but also •on account of the county road. Engineers were cautioned to run very slowly, and the instruction at one time was not to exceed eight miles per hour round that curve.” After putting all the facts together as best he could upon the ground, he gives the above as his probable inference, founded on evidence too defective to enable him to .give us anything beyond his conjecture as to the probable cause or causes of the accident; and the case seems to be left by the •evidence in that condition. There is certainly nothing to
Therefore, if we can not say that a sixteen degree curve is negligence per se, we must say that this verdict, tried by this record, is either wholly without evidence on the essential point of negligence, or that the fast running against orders-contributed to the result; and if it is our place to see that even-handed justice be meted out as near as may be, according to the very truth of the matter before us, a new trial must be granted; and it is so ordered.