Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co. v. Clifton Forge-Waynesboro Telephone Co.

224 S.E.2d 317, 216 Va. 858, 1976 Va. LEXIS 216
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 23, 1976
DocketRecord 750812
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 224 S.E.2d 317 (Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co. v. Clifton Forge-Waynesboro Telephone Co.) 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
Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co. v. Clifton Forge-Waynesboro Telephone Co., 224 S.E.2d 317, 216 Va. 858, 1976 Va. LEXIS 216 (Va. 1976).

Opinion

Harrison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The question involved in this case is whether an exculpatory clause in an agreement executed by The Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Company and the Clifton Forge-Waynesboro Telephone Company precluded Telephone Company from recovering damages to its property proximately caused by the negligence of C & O. The trial court held that recovery could be had, it being of opinion that the contrac *859 tual exemption from liability for negligence found in the agreement was against public policy and void.

Telephone Company provides service to residents in and around Covington. C & O owns a right-of-way in Covington where its tracks cross Riverside Street by an overpass. Incident to extending service to residents west of the railroad tracks, and being desirous of placing underground cables under the Riverside overpass, Telephone Company executed an agreement with C & O, dated November 24, 1954, whereby C & O consented to the location of the cables on its right-of-way. The agreement signed by the parties is referred to as “a standard license agreement normally used by C & O for such purposes” and contains the following paragraphs, pertinent to the case:

1. “The Railway Company hereby licenses and permits the Licensee, at its sole risk and expense, to construct, maintain and operate a wire line consisting of two (2) 909 pair, lead-covered cables, together with necessary poles, towers, conduits, fixtures and other equipment under and across its right of way, tracks and wires and the wires of The Western Union Telegraph Company.
7. “The Licensee hereby assumes all risks of loss or damage of any nature to said wire line crossing and appurtenances, however caused, and releases the Railway Company from all liability on account thereof.”

Pursuant to this agreement, Telephone Company ran wires aerially along poles owned by the Virginia Electric and Power Company to a pole on the north side and within a few feet of the overpass. The wires were then run vertically down the pole through a sheath and thereafter underground for approximately 64 feet under the C & O tracks and right-of-way. The wires emerged on the south side of the overpass and continued aerially along Riverside Street. On July 24, 1967, the parties executed a letter agreement which permitted additional cables to be placed by Telephone Company on the railroad right-of-way, and at this time the 1954 agreement was reaffirmed.

On September 9, 1971, a number of coal cars from trains operated by C & Ó derailed at the Riverside Street overpass. As a result of the derailment, the sheath and many of the cables inside it were damaged in the amount of $25,000. Neither the amount of the damage nor the proximate cause thereof is in issue. C & O admits that except for the *860 exemption from negligence clause found in its license agreement, Telephone Company would be entitled to recover.

Telephone Company maintained, and the trial court agreed, that the law of the case is controlled by Johnson's Adm'x v. R. & D. R. R. Co., 86 Va. 975, 11 S. E. 829 (1890). There the decedent Johnson was a member of a firm of quarrymen who entered into a written agreement with the railroad company for the removal of a granite bluff on the company’s right-of-way. A part of the agreement was that the railroad would not be held responsible for any injuries to, or the death of, any member of the firm sustained from the work. In addition, it was understood that the trains of the railroad, in passing the bluff where the work was being done, would run at a speed not exceeding 6 miles an hour. While performing work under the agreement, Johnson was involved in an accident allegedly caused by the negligence of the railroad company. There was evidence to indicate that at the time he was injured the train involved was running at a speed of not less than 25 miles an hour. The trial court instructed the jury that if Johnson executed the agreement with the railroad company, he was precluded from recovering in the case. The court refused all instructions dealing with a violation of the promise of the railroad to limit the speed of its trains. We reversed a finding for the railroad and remanded for a new trial. In the course of our opinion we said:

“It was very properly conceded in the argument that the instruction given by the circuit court is erroneous. The theory of that instruction is that the fifth clause of the written agreement, although it, in effect, stipulates for exemption from liability even for the consequences of the company’s own negligence, is notwithstanding valid, and consequently precludes a recovery by the plaintiff, whether the company was negligent or not. It would be strange, indeed, if such a doctrine could be maintained. To uphold the stipulation in question, would be to hold that it was competent for one party to put the other parties to the contract at the mercy of its own misconduct, which can never be lawfully done where an enlightened system of jurisprudence prevails. Public policy forbids it, and contracts against public policy are void. Nothing is better settled, certainly in this court, than that a common carrier cannot by contract exempt himself from responsibility for his own or his servants’ negligence in the carriage of goods or passengers for hire. This is so independently of section 1296 of the Code; and the principle which vitiates a stipulation for exemption from liability for one’s own negligence, *861 is not confined to the contracts of carriers as such; it applies universally. .. .” 86 Va. at 978, 11 S. E. at 829, 830.

We observe that at the time of the decision in Johnson, the applicable statute in Virginia read:

“No agreement made by a common carrier for exemption from liability for injury or loss occasioned by his own neglect or misconduct, shall be valid.” Virginia Code 1887, § 1296. [Emphasis supplied]

Subsequent to the decision, in the year 1904, § 1296 of the 1887 Code was repealed and a new section enacted which read as follows:

“No agreement made by a transportation company for exemption from liability for injury or loss occasioned by its own negligence or misconduct as a common carrier shall be valid.” Virginia Code § 3930. [Emphasis supplied]

The present statute, successor to Code § 3930, is Code § 56-119 and provides:

“Contracts, etc., limiting liability invalid__No contract, receipt, rule, or regulation shall exempt any transportation company from the liability of a common earner which would exist had no contract been made or entered into and no such contract, receipt, rule, or regulation for exemption from liability for injury or loss occasioned by the neglect or misconduct of such transportation company as a common carrier shall be valid. (Code 1919, §§ 3926, 3930.)” [Emphasis supplied]

Telephone Company argues that the Johnson case is controlling precedent in Virginia and clearly requires that the judgment in this case be affirmed.

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Bluebook (online)
224 S.E.2d 317, 216 Va. 858, 1976 Va. LEXIS 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chesapeake-ohio-railway-co-v-clifton-forge-waynesboro-telephone-co-va-1976.