Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Company v. Howard

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Chesapeake Ohio Railway Company v. Howard
by Rufus Wheeler Peckham
Syllabus
829901Chesapeake Ohio Railway Company v. Howard — SyllabusRufus Wheeler Peckham
Court Documents

United States Supreme Court

178 U.S. 153

Chesapeake Ohio Railway Company  v.  Howard

 Argued: April 17, 18, 1900. --- Decided: May, 21, 1900

The railroad company seeks by this writ of error to reverse a judgment obtained against it at a trial term of the supreme court of the District of Columbia in favor of defendants in error, which judgment has been affirmed by the court of appeals of the District.

The defendants in error are husband and wife, and the action was brought by themto recover damages alleged to have been sustained by the wife because the car in which she was riding ran off the track while forming part of a train in transit from Louisville, Kentucky, to the city of Washington, D. C. The accident occurred during the night of November 16, 1886, at a place called Soldier, in the state of Kentucky, and about 60 miles west of the east line of the state, and while the train was running on the rails of the Elizabethtown, Lexington, & Big Sandy Railroad Company, which was a Kentucky corporation.

The amended declaration of the plaintiffs below alleged that the train on which the wife was a passenger was operated and conducted by the agents of the plaintiff in error, and that the plaintiff in error was managing and operating a line of railway between the cities of Louisville, in the state of Kentucky, and Washington city, in the District of Columbia, and upon said line of railway it was a common carrier of passengers for hire; that on the 18th of November, 1886, the plaintiff, Laura P. Howard, purchased from the agents of the defendant, at the city of Louisville, a ticket entitling her to a passage upon the railway from the city of Louisville to the city of Washington, and the defendant, it was alleged, thereupon became bound to safely carry and transport her from the city of Louisville to the city of Washington, but the defendant did not carry or transport her safely, and that near the town of Soldier, in the state of Kentucky, by the unskilfulness, carelessness, and wrongful neglect and mismanagement of defendants' agents in charge of said train, the sleeping car in which she was riding left the track, and went down an embankment and was demolished, and she was badly wounded and injured, and that by reason of these injuries she suffered great pain, and has been rendered permanently unable to do any business.

The defendant took issue upon these allegations, and the case went to trial. It has been twice tried, and upon the first trial, when all the evidence was in, the court directed a verdict for the defendant on the ground that no liability on its part had been shown for the accident in question. Upon appeal to the court of appeals of the District that court reversed the judgment (11 App. D. C. 300), and granted a new trial. A retrial was had, and the jury found a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, upon which judgment was entered, and on appeal it has been affirmed by the court of appeals. (14 App. D. C. 262).

Mr. Leigh Robinson for plaintiff in error.

Messrs. R. Ross Perry, James Francis Smith, and R. Ross Perry, Jr., for defendants in error.

Mr. Justice Peckham, after stating the above facts, delivered the opinion of the court:

Notes[edit]

This work is in the public domain in the United States because it is a work of the United States federal government (see 17 U.S.C. 105).

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