Carpenter v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad

79 S.E.2d 603, 195 Va. 530
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 25, 1954
DocketRecord 4133, 4134
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 79 S.E.2d 603 (Carpenter v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad) 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
Carpenter v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad, 79 S.E.2d 603, 195 Va. 530 (Va. 1954).

Opinion

Miller, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Neil Madison Carpenter and Geddy Carroll Casey, twelve and thirteen years of age respectively, hereinafter referred to as decedents, were instantly killed about five o’clock p. m. on January 27, 1951, when struck by a locomotive of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company.

Each decedent’s administrator instituted an action for 115,00o 1 against the company under section 8-633, et seq., Code of 1950, commonly called the death by wrongful act statute, and alleged that the death of his decedent was caused solely by the negligence of employees of the railroad company.

The actions were tried together and a verdict of $2,500 was returned in favor of each administrator. Upon motions of the defendant these verdicts were set aside by the court and judgments entered in favor of the company non obstante veredicto-, from those judgments writs of error were granted.

The opinion of the trial judge discloses that the- verdicts were set aside solely because he concluded that the evidence failed to establish that defendant was guilty of any negligence.

The testimony shows that decedents were of average intelligence and education, and the size and height of each *532 were about normal for boys of their respective ages, the older being 4 feet, 10 inches, tall and the younger 4 feet, 8 inches, in height. Yet as both were under fourteen years of age, they were presumed to be incapable of negligence, P. L. Farmer, Inc. v. Cimino, 185 Va. 965, 970, 41 S. E. (2d) 1, and it is conceded that the jury was warranted in so holding.

Thus the only question presented is whether or not the evidence sustains the finding of the jury that defendant’s employees had been guilty of negligence that proximately caused the accident.

In Chesterfield county where the accident occurred, defendant’s standard gauge double-tracked railroad extends in a northerly and southerly direction. It is maintained upon a built-up bed or dirt fill, and by means of a trestle passes over the single track railroad of the Seaboard Air Line Railroad Company, which extends in an easterly and westerly direction.

Along the center of the trestle midway between the two tracks and on each outer edge or side of the trestle are dark colored iron girders, which extend upward from the level of the track, and thus constitute suspension supports for defendant’s railroad. The outside girders extend 3 feet, 9 inches, above the level of the crossties, and they are 1 foot, 4 inches, wide, and enclose the east and west sides of the entire trestle. The center girder extends 2 feet, 10 inches, above the level of the ties and is 1 foot, 8 inches, wide. That girder constitutes a solid partition between the tracks from the north to the south end of the trestle.

Neither the length nor width of the trestle is stated in the evidence nor is the distance between the two tracks given. It does, however, appear from exhibits that the length of the trestle was amply sufficient to bridge the Seaboard Air Line track and that the two girders along the trestle’s outer edges and the one between the tracks were a few feet distant respectively from the outer and inner rails.

The train involved in the accident was made up of a Deisel locomotive operating in reverse and pulling one box *533 car. It was traveling in a southerly direction along the east or northbound track at a speed of 30 to 35 miles per hour. There are five windows in the rear of the engine through which a lookout may be kept when it is thus backed or driven in reverse. As defendant’s engine approached and entered upon the trestle from the north, a long train was moving in a westerly direction upon the lower track and passing under the trestle. Noise from that train made it difficult to hear other sounds.

In the general area of the trestle defendant’s railroad curves to the left—that is, to the east—when viewed in the direction in which its train was proceeding. Thus when the trestle is approached along the curving track, each girder obscures a wider and considerably greater portion of the trestle and roadbed, particularly on the right or west side, than it would obscure if the railroad were not curved.

Plaintiffs proved that at the south end of the trestle a foot path led up each side of the fill from the track below, and in the immediate area paths extended along defendant’s roadbed close to the ends of the crossties. All of these paths were used as walkways by people in the community to such an extent that defendant had, or must be deemed to have had, knowledge of that use. The company does not now contend that it did not owe the duty to use reasonable care to discover and avoid injury to pedestrians whom it might reasonably expect to be upon its tracks in this area. Washington & Old Dominion R. R. v. Taylor, Adm'x, etc., 188 Va. 458, 468, 50 S. E. (2d) 415.

At the time of the accident the engine was occupied by six of defendant’s crewmen. One was an instructor and one a student switchman. These two employees were engaged with duties in the engine cab where they could not keep a lookout ahead. The other four crewmen were W. M. Myrick, the regular engineer, H. L. Elks, the fireman who, however, is also a classified engineer and as such was operating the locomotive under the supervision and control of Myrick, yard foreman James R. Morris, and switchman R. M. Kirkland.

*534 The two engineers were called by plaintiffs as adverse witnesses, but Morris and Kirkland testified at the instance of defendant. It appears from the testimony of these four men that engineer Elks was seated at and looking ahead through the window nearest the west side of the engine; Myrick was standing and looking ahead through the window next to him. Kirkland was looking through the center window, and Morris was seated at and looking through the window nearest to the east side of the engine. However, none of these crewmen saw the boys until they suddenly appeared on the east track at the south end of the trestle a few feet from the center girder, and only some eight to ten feet in front of the engine.

The testimony of Myrick as to the location and movements of decedents when he first saw them and their proximity to the moving engine follows:

“Q. State what you saw just before the accident.
“A. Well, when I got about eight or ten feet—you may say six of eight feet—of them I saw those two boys come from the center of the bridge—from the middle girder of this bridge. One of them looked like he practically stopped in the track. I term him the smallest boy; and he was in a crouched position; and the other one was following in his steps.
“Q. You considered you were about eight feet from the boys before you saw them?
“A. Yes, sir, eight or ten feet--.”
#&=&#***
“Q. And if you were ten feet from them, you saw the boys about a quarter of a second before the impact?

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Bluebook (online)
79 S.E.2d 603, 195 Va. 530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carpenter-v-atlantic-coast-line-railroad-va-1954.