DocketNumber: 11233
Judges: Fraser, Marion, Chi, Justic, Gary, Watts, Cothran
Filed Date: 5/16/1923
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
May 16, 1923. The opinion of the Court was delivered by This is an action for damages for the killing of the plaintiff's testator. The jury found for the plaintiff, and the defendant appealed. The appeal contends that there was no evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant, and conclusive evidence of contributory negligence.
Judge Moore, who heard the case on Circuit, gave his reasons for not granting a new trial as follows:
"Order Overruling Motion for New Trial.
"Upon the trial of this case the jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $5,000. In due time the defendants noted a motion for a new trial upon five grounds, which were submitted in writing and filed in the record.
"The first three grounds stated in the motion for a new trial appear to me to be controlled by the principles announced by our Supreme Court in the cases of Jones v. Railroad Co., 61 S.E., 556; 39 S.E., 758. Sentell v. Southern Ry. Co.,
"The fourth ground upon which a new trial is asked complains that I failed to charge the jury that any negligence of the fireman, contributing to the injury as a proximate cause thereof, would not be binding upon the defendant engineer. I charged the jury that it was the duty of the fireman to keep a lookout, and that, if he failed to do so, it was negligence which would bind that railway company *Page 481 whose servant he was, but I did not charge that his negligence would bind the defendant engineer. No request was submitted upon the part of the defendant engineer to instruct the jury that the negligence of the fireman was not attributable to him, and therefore the question raised in this ground was not before the Court upon the trial of the case. The engineer could not have been prejudiced by any failure to give the instruction now contended for, for the reasons that the jury found that plaintiff's testator was killed by the locomotive engine at the time and place alleged in the complaint, and that the defendant engineer was in charge of said locomotive. The engineer testified that he did not see plaintiff's testator on track or close to it, and did not know that he had killed a person, and from that statement only two reasonable inferences are possible. One is that he was not keeping a lookout, as his duty required him to do so, or else, if keeping a lookout and seeing plaintiff's testator in a position of peril, he failed to use any care whatsoever for his safety. Besides it appears to me to be a notorious fact that the engineer is always in charge of the locomotive and the fireman thereof.
"As to the fifth ground of the motion, my attention has been called to no testimony from which any reasonable inference could have been drawn to sustain the allegation that the persons for whose benefit this action was brought were guilty of any negligence that contributed, even in a remote degree, to the death of plaintiff's testator. I cannot see that any of the grounds of the motion for a new trial are well taken. I am satisfied that the law of the case was correctly given the jury, and the issues of fact properly submitted to them for consideration, and, in my opinion, there is ample testimony to support the verdict returned by the jury. The motion for a new trial, therefore, is refused."
These reasons are entirely satisfactory to this Court. *Page 482
II. Contributory negligence is a question for the jury. The case of Davis v. Payne (S.C.),
The judgment is affirmed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE GARY and MR. JUSTICE WATTS concur.