DocketNumber: 8722
Citation Numbers: 80 S.E. 616, 96 S.C. 368, 1914 S.C. LEXIS 213
Judges: Fraser
Filed Date: 1/13/1914
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is an action for damages. The plaintiff was mail clerk on a passenger train of the defendant. As the train approached Crestón, a station on the defendant’s road, the train was derailed. There is no dispute as to the cause of the derailment. There was a nut on the rail and when the wheel struck the nut, it was thrown off the rail and produced the wreck. The track between and at the place of the accident and Crestón was down grade. There were three questions in-the case:
1st. Should the motion for continuance have been granted ?
2d. How did the nut get on the track? .
3d. Did the wreck produce injury to the plaintiff?
*370 This case was tried and resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff. From this judgment the defendant appealed upon six exceptions, which will be considered in order.
It is true his Honor consulted other attorneys at the same bar, as to the propriety of continuing this and other cases because of the illness of one of defendant’s counsel, but in the absence of any showing to the contrary, we must assume that there were attorneys at the Sumter bar upon, whose discretion he could rely. The- affidavit of Mr. Jennings was not before the Court and could not have been the basis of his Honor’s action. It will be further noted that the advice which Judge Gage received only confirmed his determination and did not control it. The great skill shown by the ■remaining counsel in the conduct of the case was full vindication of the soundness of his judgment.
“ ‘From the experience you had with hand cars, tell the jury whether or not, in your opinion, a hand car or lever car would stand on that particular track anywhere there— leaving the public road coming towards Rone Star, without being chocked?
“‘Mr. McRemore: We object. The witness has not qualified as an expert to testify on that.
*371 “ ‘Court: I don’t think it takes an expert to testify to that.
“ ‘Go ahead, Mr. Cuttino.
“ ‘Why, anywhere in the neighborhood of that road, forty or fifty feet, going towards Lone Star, I don’t believe a car would stand there of its own weight, if not chocked.’ ”
3. “In permitting the witness, Finn, to give his opinion as to whether or not a hand car would stand on the grade involved in the case; whereas, such testimony should have been excluded upon the objection of defendant, as it involved merely the expression-of an opinion, and the witness was not shown to be cpialified to give such an opinion, the objection, ruling and evidence being as follows:
“ ‘Tell the jury whether, in your opinion, a hand car being pushed over this railroad up there, and get lumber off, whether it would stand on that grade without being chocked?
“ ‘Mr. McLemore: I object. No foundation laid so as to allow this witness to testify whether a hand car would stand that way. He is a locomotive engineer, running a train, and has not testified he ever used one in his life.
“ ‘Have you ever used a lever car ?
“ ‘Court: I think he can testify. Note the objection.
“ ‘Go on and tell the jury whether, in your opinion, the hand car in the ordinary use would stand on that grade without being chocked ?
“ ‘No, sir, I don’t think, ordinary use put to, it would stand there without somebody to hold it on.’ ”
These exceptions will be considered together and neither can be sustained. Both witnesses testified that they were familiar with the grade. Both had had experience with the handling of cars. It is true they had not handled this particular kind of car, but the principles governing them were said to be the same and the opinion was competent.
*372
The statement of Judge Gage in ruling on these motions is clear and convincing, and is as follows: “Court: I read that during the argument. I have seen many a man convicted on circumstances less strong that these. The proof showed that at the outside, twenty minutes after, the' hands left the locus — and perhaps in fifeen minutes, between fifteen and twenty-eight minutes, a passenger train came along. This thing occurred in broad open daylight. The testimony did not warrant any suspicion that á third party put the nut on the track.” This exception is overruled.
His Honor charged the jury as follows: “I will state to you that before there can be any recovery by the plaintiff, you must not only find that the plaintiff is in the condition set forth in the complaint, but that he did actually receive the injuries set forth in the complaint, which injuries were solely responsible for his present condition. I further charge you that in reaching your decision in these matters, you must base your deliberations upon the actual facts as disclosed by the testimony, and must not leave same to conjecture or speculation. If you should find that the plaintiff *373 is in a highly nervous condition, unless, from the testimony, you can assign his condition to be due solely to such injuries as he is alleged to have received on September 25, 1912, there can be no recovery by the plaintiff.”
That covered all of this request that his Honor could charge. There was no issue as to- an honest misapprehension by the plaintiff of his condition.
This exception cannot be sustained.
“The error being that the request contained a sound proposition of law applicable to the case, and it was prejudicial to defendant for the Court to refuse so to charge and to impress the jury with the view that the request was erro *374 neous and needed modification. The modification was erroneous and prejudicial because it could not have affected the jury in itself otherwise than to impress them with the idea that it was necessary for the defendant to have proved positively and directly (and not negatively by attempting to eliminate the fact of the wreck having occurred by the leaving of the nut on the rail by the section force, which plaintiff attempted to prove by circumstantial evidence) the placing of the nut by some outside person the only suggestion by way of modification of defendant’s request contained in. the language of the Court tending to plant in the minds of the jury the need of evidence showing a present witnessing of the act of some outside person in placing the obstruction.”
It is not entirely clear just what is the error claimed, appellant itself being the judge. Appellant says in its argument : “Again, we are unable to perceive what modification was made except in the portions we have italicized.”
If the appellant cannot, after mature deliberation and careful study, point out with certainty the error, it is certainly proper to hold that the jury would not perceive the difference. The trial Judge is not bound to charge the exact language of a request. It seems, therefore, that the request was substantially charged. There are two variations suggested and we consider those. 1st. That his Honor charged’ that it was necessary for the defendant to prove by a witness that saw the public enemy put the nut on the track. The language is not susceptible of that construction. The request assumed that some one had “placed” the nut on the track, %. <?., deliberately put the nut on the track. Now take the charge as a whole, then the word “seen” means if there be proof of the presence of a mischievous person who-put the nut on the track, then the railroad would not be liable.
*375 2. “Then the railroad company must prove that the accident occurred was-the act of another except the act of its own agent.”
The judgment is affirmed.