144 S.E. 100 | W. Va. | 1928
This action is brought under the Federal Employers' Liability Act by Kelly Webb for an injury sustained by him while in the employ of the defendant railway company by reason of the alleged negligence of a fellow employee. Judgment for the plaintiff for $10,000.00, and defendant brings error.
On the morning of September 1, 1925, while the section crew was engaged in track repair and maintenance work near Dorothy, Raleigh county, the foreman called plaintiff, a member of said crew, from the place where he and Massey were tamping ties, and conducted him a short distance east to the point of the accident for the purpose of having a certain tie removed and replaced — the tie in question being the second east of the one which Richmond, another employee, was then engaged in tamping. The railroad at this point was elevated some ten or twelve inches above the surface of the ground, and, at the time of the injury, plaintiff was standing on the ground on the south side of the track, facing north. When plaintiff began shoveling the ballast away from the west edge of the head of the tie — that is, from that portion which extends beyond the rails — Richmond was still tamping the quarter, *557 the portion of the tie between the rails. Richmond was standing between the rails just west of the tie he was tamping, and a little more than four feet west of plaintiff. Plaintiff had removed possibly three shovelfuls of ballast from the head of his tie, when Richmond, who upon finishing tamping the quarter stepped over the rail for the purpose of tamping the head of the tie on the side plaintiff was working, and without looking up raised his pick and brought the tamping point of the same down on plaintiff's head, thereby felling the latter to the ground, and rendering him unconscious for a few minutes. Plaintiff was directed to go to the doctor some two miles distant to have his wound dressed. Prior to the injury he was strong and healthy and able to perform the hardest kind of labor for the defendant company. Since the accident he has lost weight and has continuously suffered with headache and dizziness, and has been unable to perform any labor. It is admitted on the record that the defendant railroad is engaged in interstate commerce.
The first point stressed is that there was no evidence of negligence on the part of the railway company or any of its employees or agents. Both Webb and Richmond testified as to their relative positions and movements prior to and at the time of the accident. Webb showed where Richmond was working at the time he passed around him and began to remove the ballast from the head of the tie, which he had been instructed to remove. He further testified that the shoveling of the blue limestone ballast made noise enough to have warned Richmond of his presence. Richmond explains that when he had finished tamping the quarter that he stepped over (outside) the rail, and, without looking, began to swing the pick to tamp the head, and in doing so that he struck the plaintiff on the head on the first or second lick. The employee may assume that the employer, or his agents or servants, have exercised proper care with respect to his safety. Such is the rule laid down inChicago, Rock Island Pac. Ry. Co. v. Ward,
But was the risk assumed by the employee? According to the Federal decisions, in cases other than for violation of the Federal statutes enacted for the safety of employees, the defense of assumption of risk shall have its former effect as a complete bar to an action under the statutes. Seaboard AirLine Ry. Co. v. Horton,
The foreman supports plaintiff's claim that Richmond was not within striking distance of him immediately before he assumed the position from which the plaintiff was struck. The foreman says he put Webb at work "cleaning out a tie bed"; and that "Richmond was five ties down — four ties, with a tie between that Kelly was cleaning out." This was the position of the two men when the foreman turned and started to walk back down the track. He had not gone more than "thirty or thirty-five feet, maybe forty" when his attention was attracted by a disturbance behind him, and upon looking around saw Richmond holding Webb in his arms. Then, again, Webb is supported in his story by Richmond, who says, "I was tamping on the inside of the rail * * *. When I got that through, I stepped one foot over * * * and went tamping right on the rail, stooping over." On being asked whether he hit Webb with the first lick after he stepped over outside the rail, he replied: "Well, I don't know whether it was the first, or it might have been the second." Thus the fact is established that Webb did not change his position but that his fellow workman, Richmond, on changing his position, did not perform a duty which he owed to Webb, that of first ascertaining what his changed position would be in relation to Webb. But the railway company to counteract the contention of the plaintiff, put in evidence a statement taken down a few months after the injury by a claim agent, which statement was prepared by such agent, and after being read over to Webb, was signed by the latter. In this statement Webb was made to say "I knew we were working too close together and would have to be careful." This bare statement is robbed of much of its force when read in its setting in the entire statement purported to have been made by him, and considering the circumstances under which it was made. As we have shown, it is overborne by the testimony of Webb, Richmond and the foreman. Under this state of the facts, it was not a question of law for the court but for *560
the jury. It is only where the facts which control are not disputed and are such as reasonable minds can draw but one conclusion from them, that the question of the assumption of risk barring recovery is one of law for the court.Krodel v. B. O. R. Co.,
Defendant complains of plaintiff's instruction No. 3, as well as No. 1, in its form as amended by the court, on the ground that they fail to incorporate the whole doctrine of the assumption of risk. The court, however, at the instance of the defendant did give its instruction No. 10, which told the jury that an employee assumes not only the ordinary risks incident to his employment but also all other risks incident thereto, provided he knows of such extraordinary risks and appreciates the danger, or provided such risks are so plain to be seen that he must be presumed to know them and to appreciate the danger. This is undoubtedly the law. Butler v. Frazee,
The final question is: Is the verdict excessive? It is in evidence that the plaintiff has not been able to do any work since the injury; that immediately following such injury he was in bed off and on for about three weeks, and nearly all of the following winter; that a physician waited upon him for nearly a year, seeing him on an average of two or three times a week; that when he attempted to do anything, such as work a little bit in the garden or field, he got weak and nervous and had to quit; and that his head constantly hurt him. He had worked for the railroad company prior to the injury in all nine years, during which time he was strong and able to do hard labor, and was in good health at the time of the injury complained of.
At the August term, 1926 (nearly a year afterward), on motion of the defendant, the court appointed six reputable practicing physicians to make an examination of plaintiff's condition, on the theory that he was malingering. These physicians all testified at the time of such examination that Webb was a very sick man, and had a *562
rapid pulse ranging from 110 to 132 per minute, with a temperature of 100.2°, and was in a very weakened physical condition. Two physicians, Cook and Hedrick, testified that in their opinion the present condition of the plaintiff was directly attributable to the injury. Five physicians testified to the opposite, and further that in their opinion plaintiff was suffering from toxic goitre, which could and would produce all the symptoms of which he complained. Thus is seen a conflict in the expert testimony on the issue whether plaintiffs condition is directly attributable to the injury. As to this latter class of evidence, the decisions are to the effect that where there is a conflict between the opinions of different experts or skilled witnesses, it is for the triers of the fact to decide which witnesses they will believe or rely on. 22 C. J. 738. Proof of facts will usually outweigh opinions or estimates contrary thereto. Comstock v. Lumber Company,
Considering the admitted character of the injury, the direct testimony as to the extent of plaintiff's suffering, and his former good health, coupled with the expert testimony in his favor, the jury were amply justified in finding that the condition of the plaintiff as disclosed by the medical examination upon the trial was directly attributable to the injury. The permanency of the injury is shown by its long duration and its present baleful character as testified to by all the physicians who were called as witnesses on the trial by both plaintiff and defendant. It is patent that if the present physical condition of the defendant is due to such injury, it is not the province of the Court to declare it excessive since we cannot say that it is so excessive as to indicate passion and prejudice on the part of the jury. See note on excessiveness of verdicts, 46 A.L.R. 1230.
The judgment will be affirmed.
*563Affirmed.