Butler v. Darden

53 S.E.2d 146, 189 Va. 459, 1949 Va. LEXIS 188
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 25, 1949
DocketRecord No. 3486
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 53 S.E.2d 146 (Butler v. Darden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Butler v. Darden, 53 S.E.2d 146, 189 Va. 459, 1949 Va. LEXIS 188 (Va. 1949).

Opinion

Buchanan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Ralph Butler was killed when the front end of the automobile in which he was riding as a guest was struck by a Seaboard Air Line train at a grade crossing in the village of Carrsville, Isle of Wight county. James Darden [462]*462was the driver of the car. Butler’s administratrix brought this suit against Darden and the railway company. A jury returned this verdict:

“We, the jury find the defendants James Darden and Seaboard Railroad with negligence with the amount of $2,500.00 from each defendant payable to Mrs. Hattie L. Butler.”

On motion of both defendants the court set aside this verdict and entered judgment for the defendants. That action of the court is now assigned as error.

The accident happened on Sunday afternoon, May 19, 1946, about 4:22 o’clock. The weather was clear. At the place of accident the railroad runs east and west. Darden was crossing from south to north. The train that struck his car was going west. The highway over the crossing, State Highway No. 651, runs east along the south side of the railroad and practically parallel with it until it gets to a point 175 feet south of the crossing, where it makes almost a right angle turn to the left, or north, to go across the tracks. There are two tracks on the crossing—the main line, which is in the middle of the right of way, and a passing track eight feet nine and one-half inches south of the main line.

Darden, with Butler at his right on the front seat, drove along this road going east. As he turned to his left at the curve, or corner, vision to his right was obstructed by brush and weeds until he reached the corner of a fence called the Wade fence, which runs east from there parallel with the railroad right of way. This corner is ten feet south of the right of way, which is 100 feet wide, and 60 feet south of the main line. From that point there is virtually a clear view to the east, from which direction the train was approaching. This was a passenger train, consisting of a Diesel engine and nine cars, running on the main line track. Darden drove on toward the crossing at about ten miles an hour, and neither he nor Butler saw the train until the front of the automobile was on the passing track. At that time Butler cried out, “Look out, there comes a train.” Before the automobile was stopped it proceeded so [463]*463close to the main line that the overhang of the engine struck the car about the right front wheel, throwing it around toward the passing track and killing Butler. Darden was thrown out of the car but. was not'seriously injured.

The tracks were level and straight east and west of the crossing and there were no cars on the passing track. The road as it approached the right of way was about three feet lower than the crossing, and the track level was reached over a short rise, at the bottom of which was a culvert. The roadway over the crossing was only 13 feet wide and ■its surface was bumpy, with the rails extending a little above the surface. Darden said it was about all a car could do'to make it in high gear.

Photographs were introduced, some taken a day or two after the accident and others in July, 1947, showing the crossing, the approaching highway, the tracks and area adjacent to them as far east as an overhead bridge 1395 feet from the crossing. South of the right of way were a couple of buildings fronting about on a line with the Wade fence. There was a roadway on the' right of way about half way between the Wade fence and the passing track. Between that roadway and the passing track were some telephone poles. There was a small telephone booth some 400 feet east of the crossing a little nearer the passing track than the poles.

Three hundred thirty feet west of the overhead bridge referred to is a crossing called the main crossing. Eight hundred sixty-five feet west of this main crossing is another called the Wade crossing, and 200 feet west of the Wade crossing is the Duke crossing, where the accident happened.

The plaintiff made no effort to prove the speed of the train. Darden testified it. was running around 60 miles an hour but said “things looked worse than they would be,” and admitted this was a pure guess. It was not sufficient to contradict the evidence of the train crew that the train was on schedule and was running at not more than 30 miles an hour.

[464]*464To sustain a recovery against Darden the plaintiff must prove that he was guilty of gross negligence, since her intestate was aguest passenger in Darden’s car. If she failed in that or if Butler was himself guilty of negligence that contributed to the accident, the action of the court in setting aside the verdict against Darden was proper.

The plaintiff’s evidence established that there was nothing to prevent Darden from seeing the approaching train after he passed the corner of the Wade fence, which was 45 feet from the passing track. The engineer who made the plaintiff’s map so testified, as did her witness, Duke, who lived close to the crossing and passed over it, he said, three or four times every day. He testified that from the Wade fence to the tracks the view to the east was not obstructed and that a person approaching the crossing in an automobile could see three-fourths of a mile up the track to the east, even under the overhead bridge and beyond. The photographs show this to be true, certainly as far as the bridge 1395 feet east of the crossing.

Darden’s effort was to show that because of grass and weeds on the right of way, the telephone poles and booth, he was excusable in not seeing the train sooner than he did. Plaintiff’s witness, March, also testified that because of the conditions one must be within 20 feet of the passing track to see the bridge, and from 15 to 18 feet of that track to see a Diesel engine 150 to 200 yards away. Darden testified that when he got to the roadway on the right of way, he looked to his right “and I didn’t see any smoke of a train and I didn’t hear the whistle, and I looked back to my left towards Franklin and I made to go across, and at that I looked again; then Mr. Butler said, ‘Lookout, there comes the train’, and I applied my brakes, reached to put it in reverse, or move it, I don’t know, and the next thing I know, I was in the air.”

There was evidence that after the accident Darden said he didn’t see any smoke and wasn’t thinking about the train, and further that his brakes “would not stop, wouldn’t hold.” But he was on the passing track, within ten feet of the main [465]*465line, and within less than that of the overhang of the engine (which was nine feet wide), going ten miles an hour, when he applied his brakes. In that situation it is not surprising that he would also say that “he did not hardly know what he did,” as a witness testified.

We cannot say that the verdict of the jury was without evidence of gross negligence to support it. From the evidence the jury could find that Darden, perfectly familiar with conditions at the crossing, drove into the path of the approaching train, without looking or listening, when the train was plainly to be seen.

But if Darden was guilty of gross negligence, then the evidence that convicts him clearly convicts his passenger, Butler, of contributory negligence. If it was gross negligence in Darden to drive upon the railroad tracks without seeing the train, it is difficult to see how the failure of Butler to see it was no negligence at all.

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Bluebook (online)
53 S.E.2d 146, 189 Va. 459, 1949 Va. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/butler-v-darden-va-1949.