Study aid, not legal advice. caselaw is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice or engage in the unauthorized practice of law (UPL). All briefs, outlines, and citation tools on these pages are educational summaries for law students; they are not a substitute for advice from a licensed attorney admitted in your jurisdiction. Bar-admission rules vary by state. For court filings or client matters, verify every authority against the official reporter and your court's local rules. Use of caselaw does not create an attorney-client relationship.
ATLANTIC COAST LINE RAILROAD COMPANY, Plaintiff in Error, v. Alva H. BYRD, as Executor under the Last Will and Testament of Huger S. Byrd, Deceased, Defendant in Error, 1925 — 8 F.2d 1016 · caselaw · US
Torts · MBE-tested
ATLANTIC COAST LINE RAILROAD COMPANY, Plaintiff in Error, v. Alva H. BYRD, as Executor under the Last Will and Testament of Huger S. Byrd, Deceased, Defendant in Error
8 F.2d 1016·United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit·1925
Before WADDILL, ROSE, and PARKER, Circuit Judges.
Brief incoming
Hand-reviewed Bluebook brief (procedural posture, facts, issue, holding, reasoning, dissent) ships once the AI generation pipeline runs through this case. Join the waitlist to get notified when 1L briefs go live.
Opinion
ATLANTIC COAST LINE RAILROAD COMPANY, Plaintiff in Error, v. Alva H. BYRD, as Executor under the Last Will and Testament of Huger S. Byrd, Deceased, Defendant in Error.
(Circuit Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit.
November 25, 1925.)
No. 2389.
In Error to the District Court of the United States for the Eastern -District of South Carolina, at Plorence; Ernest P. Cochran, Judge.
P. L. Willcox, of Plorence, S. C. (A. L. Hardee, of Florence, S. C., on the brief), for plaintiff in error.
James R. Coggeshall, of Darlington, S. C., and M. L. Smith, of Camden, S. C., for defendant in error.
Before WADDILL, ROSE, and PARKER, Circuit Judges.
[MAJORITY — ROSE, Circuit Judge.]
ROSE, Circuit Judge.
A statement of the facts of this case and a discussion of the applicable law will be found in our former opinion, in which we reversed a judgment for the defendant below. Byrd v. Atlantic Coast Line, 2 F.(2d) 672. We then held that the learned judge below should not have instruet'ed a verdict in favor of the defendant. We thought that whether the plaintiff’s decedent was guilty of the gross or willful negligence-necessary, under the somewhat peculiar statute of South Carolina, to defeat recovery,, depended upon whether he knew the defendant maintained and operated a second main-track over the crossing at which he was killed, and we found upon the evidence presented that whether he did or did not raised a jury-question.
At the retrial, that issue was left to the 12 men, and their verdict was against the defendant. The latter now contends that the new evidence presented showed that the deceased must have been so familiar with the crossing that no reasonable man could doubt he knew of the existence of the seeond main track. We do not think this contention can be sustained. • Upon the testimony in this record, men might fairly differ as to whether he did or did not.
Affirmed.