53 W. Va. 338 | W. Va. | 1903
The Ravenswood, Spencer and Glenville Railway Company complains of a judgment rendered against it by the circuit court of Roane County for $525.00 in favor of Joseph B. Vance, in an action for personal injury indicted upon him by the alleged negligence of the plaintiff in error, and one of the principal
The first order shows the overruling of the demurrer to the declaration, the second, the allowance of compensation to the stenographer, and the third, defendant’s demurrer to the evidence and plaintiff’s joinder therein. They were made in April and August, 1898. The next was made on the 19th day of April, 1901, as of the 29th day of August, 1898, upon the affidavits of the three attorneys for the plaintiffs, showing that it should have been entered on said last mentioned date, but had been inadvertently omitted by the clerk. That 'order sets forth the entry of the plea and joinder therein, the impanneling of the jury, demurrer to the evidence and joinder therein and the conditional verdict. On the 27th day of August, 1901, the judgment herein complained of was rendered.
Between the date of the trial and the date of the entry of the nunc pm tunc order, Hon. Reese Blizzard, the judge before whom the trial was had, resigned, and was succeeded by Hon. "Warren Miller, who entered said order and rendered the judgment. That there had been a trial, demurrer and conditional verdict was not disputed by any counter affidavit, upon the motion for the entry of the order. The affidavit filed was strongly corroborated by the former orders entered, the last one of whicli showed that there had been, a demurrer to the evidence and a joinder therein, and concluded as follows: “And the court takes time to consider of its judgment on the demurrer to* the evidence. •By consent of the parties the judgment of the court may be handed down and entered of record during the vacation with privilege to either party to file bills of exception at any time before the last day of the next November term of this Court.’’
As the record left no> room for doubt that the interlocutory proceedings omitted from the record had taken place, the only inquiry is as to the power of the court, by amendment of the record, to make.it speak the truth. At common law, the courts might amend their records so as to make them truthfully set forth what had occurred, while the proceeding was in fiare, but not after the term at which final judgment was rendered. This rule resulted in such great hardship that relief was given by early English statutes. Stat. 1, ch. 6, 14 Edw. III; Stat. 1, ch. 4, 9 Edw. V; ch. 12, 8 Henry VI. See 17 Enc. Pl. & Pr.
After said order was entered, the defendant moved the court to enter final judgment for it nunc pm tunc, as of the August term, 1898, and the action of the court in overruling that motion and declining to make the entry is assigned as error. In support of this motion, the defendant presented the affidavit of the retired judge who- had presided at the trial, setting forth, in substance, the proceedings, and stating that, at said August term, he had “rendered his opinion upon said demurrer to the evidence, and sustained said demurrer to the evidence,” but “judgment was not entered in accordance with the. opinion of the court, so* rendered, because counsel for the defendant were non-residents of Roane County, and none of them were present to see that a proper order was prepared and to ask that the same be entered.” In a valuable note appended to the report of Ninde v. Clarke, 4 Am. St. Rep. 823, giving a long list of decided cases bearing upon the question, it is said: “There are two classes of cases in which it has been held proper to enter judgments and decrees nunc pro tunc. The first class embraces those cases in which the suitors have done all in their power to place the cause in a condition to be decided by the court, but in which, owing to the delay of the court, no final judgment has been entered. The second class embarces those cases in which judgments, though pronounced by the court, have, from accident or mistake of the officers of the court,
Next, it is insisted that the court should not have rendered judgment for plaintiff, after overruling the motion for judgment for the defendant, holding that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. The facts disclosed by the evidence are, substantially, as follows: The town of Spencer is the terminus of said railroad, which is a short branch road, running from the town of Ravenswood. On it but few trains are run, and the trains carrying passengers usually consist of some freight cars and one passenger coach at the rear of the freight cars. At Spencer, in front of the station, there are three tracks, the main track running between two side tracks. It was the parctice of the railroad employees, when coming into Spencer with such, mixed train, to run down to the station, and, after letting the passengers off, run back on the track some three hundred yards or more, and then, by means of making what is called a “Flying Switch,” shift the cars onto the said track next to the station, having first given them such momentum as would carry them to the station, while the engine kept the main track. This was always, or at least frequently, done immediately after the train came in. The plaintiff resided close enough to this crossing to enable him to see how this was done, and- he knew that it was frequently done. He testified that he had seen it done a number of times, that he could sit at his house and see the engine cut the ears loose and the engine go up the main track and the cars up the side track, that he could not say how often he had seen that done, and that “lots of time he would not notice, and so did not see it very much, but that as a general rule they put the cars in in that way.” Hear the station, the three tracks so used crossed a public street, extensively used by the citizens. This street led from the main town of Spencer across the railroad and a creek to what is called East Spencer. On the 27th day of November, 1897, a few minutes after eight o’clock, p. m., the
It is very well settled that the practice of making “Flying Switches” is deemed by tire courts as dangerous, and is negligence on the part of the railroad companies, especially when it is done at public crossings, and without any signals having been given. “The courts have held, with practical unanimity, and often with great emphasis, that the practice called making the “running” or “flying switch,” which consists of 'Ticking” or “shunting” cars forward, in breaking or making up trains, by moving them forward at a rapid speed detached from the engine or from a portion of the train, and then, by checking or increasing the speed of the engine, or of such portion of the train, allowing them to fly forward over public crossings without the usual warning signals by bell or whistle, or any means of giving such signals, and without any other signals than may'be afforded by a brakeman standing on such “running” or “flying” cars, and sometimes even when such brakeman is not standing on the front car, or is on some other car, even the rear ear — is negligence. Other courts have charac
In such cases, however, the plaintiff may be barred from recovery by contributory negligence. “But while the contributory negligence of the traveler will unquestionably be a defense in these, as in other cases, yet the solution of the question what is contributory negligence is undoubtedly modified by the fact of the gross negligence or misconduct of the railway company in thrusting detached cars over the crossing without warning, after the passage of the main portion of the train has tempted the traveler into the belief that the danger is over. While, as already seen, a traveler, on approaching a railway crossing, is bound to keep a sharp lookout for approaching engines or trains, yet he is not bound to anticipate that the railway company will commit an act of negligence so1 gross as to make a “flying switch" across a public highway; and, in general, it is not negligence not to anticipate that another party will be negligent.” Thomp. Reg. sec. 1697.
It is argued here, however, that as the plaintiff has admitted that he knew it was the practice of the employees of the defendant company to make these “flying switches” at that point on the coming in of the train, he was bound to take notice of it, and that the passing of the engine was enough to suggest to him that this performance was then in process of execution. So the question is: Was it contributory negligence on the part
By demurring 4» the evidence, the demurrant admits, in favor of the demurree, all inferences of fact that may be fairly deduced from the evidence. Mapel v. John, 42 W. Va. 30; Talbott v. Railroad Co., 42 W. Va. 561; Garrett v. Ramsey, 26 W. Va. 345. “The evidence upon a demurrer to the evidence should be interpreted most benignly in favor of the de-murree; so that he may have all the benefit, which might have resulted from- the decision of the case by a ¡jury; the proper forum from which the decision has been withdrawn by the de-murrant.” Garrett v. Ramsey, (Syl. 3), approved in Gunn v. Railroad Co., 42 W. Va. 676.
The judgment being clearly right, it must be aflirmed.
Affirmed.