Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co. v. Hewin

148 S.E. 794, 152 Va. 649, 1929 Va. LEXIS 198
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 13, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 148 S.E. 794 (Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co. v. Hewin) 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. Hewin, 148 S.E. 794, 152 Va. 649, 1929 Va. LEXIS 198 (Va. 1929).

Opinion

Holt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff’s decedent, Mattie Logan, lived in New York and was a stranger to the physical environments of Richmond, whither she came in February, 1926, to attend her sister’s funeral. Services were held at a church in the central portion of that city, after which the funeral cortege moved over Magnolia street and across defendant’s main line to Woodlawn cemetery, whence it returned along the same road. It was on this return that the accident occurred. . She was in a car with five other colored passengers, driven by Fred Goodman, its owner. This automobile followed the hearse and was struck at Magnolia street crossing by a freight train going into Richmond, was totally desstroyed and Mattie Logan killed. Hence this action, which has terminated in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff.

There is some conflict as to the volume of traffic in this street, and there is also conflict as to the speed of the train which did the damage, but that it far exceeded the limit fixed by an ordinance of the city of Richmond, if it applies, is not in dispute. That ordinance appears in the City Code of 1910, as section 1 of chapter 39. It is in evidence,' and so much as seems pertinent reads as follows:

“If any engine or other vehicle be drawn or propelled upon a railroad or rail-track in a street at a greater rate than four miles an hour, the person who does it or causes it to. be done, or assists in doing it, or causing it to be done, shall pay a fine of ten dollars. Every' locomotive engine put or placed upon any railroad or rail-track in the city shall have attached thereto a bell of thirty pounds weight at least, and such bell shall be [653]*653rung whenever the said engine is about to pass the crossing of any two streets, and shall continue ringing until such engine shall have passed such crossing; and if any engine shall pass across any street in this city without first ringing and continuing to ring said bell, in manner aforesaid, the owner of the said engine, as well as the person then having the control, conduct, and management thereof, shall each be fined not less than five nor more than twenty dollars; and if any person shall blow, sound or use, or cause to be blown, sounded or used, by means of, or with steam, any whistle or other thing upon any public street or alley, he shall be fined not less than five nor more than twenty dollars; and if any railroad company, or their agents or employees shall run more than one train at the same time across the places where their tracks intersect the streets of this city, without providing a watchman to ‘flag’ each train, said railroad company, as well as the person or persons in charge of such trains, or directing their movements, shall each be fined not less than five nor more than twenty dollars.”

The trial court thought it limited the speed of all trains at all crossings to four miles an hour, and so told the jury in appropriate instructions. The correctness of this construction of the statute is challenged by the railway, and on this point this case in large measure turns. Certain general rules of interpretation are to be remembered.

In Posey v. Commonwealth, 123 Va. 551, 96 S. E. 771, this court said: “It is one of the fundamental rules of construction of statutes that the intention of the legislature is to be gathered from a view of the whole and every part of the statute taken and compared together, giving to every word and every part of the statute, if possible, its due effect and meaning, and to the words used their ordinary and [654]*654popular meaning, unless it plainly appears that they were used in some other sense. If the intention of the legislature can be thus discovered, it is not permissible to add to or subtract from the words used in the statute. Tyson v. Scott, 116 Va. 243, 81 S. E. 57; Funkhouser v. Spahr, 102 Va. 306, 46 S. E. 378; Sherwood v. Atlantic and D. R. Co., 94 Va. 291, 301, 26 S. E. 943; Hoover v. Saunders, 104 Va. 783, 52 S. E. 657; Fox v. Commonwealth, 16 Gratt. (57 Va.) 1; Postal Tel. Co. v. Norfolk and W. R. Co., 88 Va. 920, 925, 14 S. E. 803.”

Conditions which make legislation necessary are at times important, particularly when the meaning of words is obscure or when they are susceptible of more than one definition, and in such circumstances the inconvenience or unreasonableness of any particular construction should be considered. Postal Telegraph Cable Co. v. N. & W. Ry. Co., supra; Sherwood v. Atlantic & D. R. Co., supra; Immigration Soc. v. Commonwealth, 103 Va. 46, 48 S. E. 509; Knowlton v. Moore, 178 U. S. 41, 20 S. Ct. 747, 44 L. Ed. 969.

Primary and ordinary definitions of words are to be adopted unless their context and the conditions in which they are used appear to make some more meticulous construction necessary. “In” is a word of indeterminate meaning. One who crosses Broad street, for the time being is in it, but certainly “in” is not always a synonym for “across.” One may go in that street for miles and never cross it. If a man were told that a train ran upon a track in a certain street, it would never occur to him that a simple crossing was meant, and were he told that the main track of the R. F. & P. R. Co. ran in Belvidere street, he would have little doubt as to its location.

[655]*655 Conceding, as we should, that “in,” unqualified, is an indefinite preposition, and waiving for the time the inconvenience which follows that construction for which plaintiff contends, that which was indefinite is made definite by its context. “Upon” is also used. To describe a train crossing Belvidere street as running upon a track in it, would be singularly inapt. “Crossing,” when applied to highways and railways, is of unmistakable import. It is an accurate expression commonly employed in statutes and elsewhere to fit a particular situation, and for it “in” is an unsatisfactory substitute, all of which the draughtsman of the ordinance must have known.

This instinctive conclusion is well supported by internal evidence. “Across” and “crossing” are there used four times and “intersect” once. The idea of longitudinal progress finds further support in the provision that a bell shall be rung whenever an engine is about to pass the crossing of any two streets. Such a situation would ordinarily arise when it ran along one street and across another. It likewise prohibits the blowing of an engine whistle “upon” any street. “Upon” here means “in” and the prohibition must have been directed against such an act when the engine ran along some street and not when it was in the act of crossing it. Moreover, when this ordinance was enacted, the main line of the R. F. & P. railroad ran through the most populous part of Richmond, and its tracks in the not distant past had extended many blocks down Broad street — conditions which made such restrictions in these localities wise and reasonable, but which called for no such limitations in outlying districts. Again, a reduction of speed to four miles an hour at every crossing within the city’s limits would be a regulation highly inconvenient, even if lawful, and at [656]*656times wholly unnecessary. Richmond has the power to require gates whenever traffic conditions and public safety call for them, and has often exercised it.

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Bluebook (online)
148 S.E. 794, 152 Va. 649, 1929 Va. LEXIS 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chesapeake-ohio-railway-co-v-hewin-va-1929.