Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co. v. Whitlow

51 S.E. 182, 104 Va. 90, 1905 Va. LEXIS 75
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 15, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 51 S.E. 182 (Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co. v. Whitlow) 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. Whitlow, 51 S.E. 182, 104 Va. 90, 1905 Va. LEXIS 75 (Va. 1905).

Opinion

Oakdwell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

[91]*91This action was brought by George W. Whitlow against the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Company to recover damages, caused by the negligence of the defendant company, the specific cause of complaint .alleged being that the defendant company negligently allowed stagnant water, decayed vegetation, mud, etc., to accumulate and remain upon and along its right of way where it passes through the farm on which the plaintiff resides in the county of Eluvanna, in consequence whereof the plaintiff and his family became sick with malaria, etc.

There was a verdict in the lower court in favor of the plaintiff for $i800, and a judgment thereon, which we are asked to review and reverse because of the action of' the tidal court in over-ruling the demurrer to the declarations filed hy the plaintiff, for misdirection of the jury in the instructions given, and refusing the defendant company a new trial on the ground that the verdict is contrary to the law and the evidence.

The plaintiff with his family, consisting of his wife and seven children, moved upon a farm in Eluvanna county in 1898, and has since occupied it, the legal title to the farm being in the wife. The defendant company is the successor of the Richmond & Alleghany Railroad Company, and as such succeeded to the ownership of the property and franchises of the James River and Kanawha Canal Company, including the old canal which passes through the farm upon which the plaintiff resides, upon the tow-path of which the railroad track is laid, the residence of the plaintiff being about 100' to 140 yards therefrom. Ry the act of the assembly (Ads, 1878-’9, 119,) authorizing the R. & A. R. Company, the predecessor in title of the defendant company, to acquire the canal and convert it into a railroad, imposed upon the railroad company the duty to so drain the same as not to leave stagnant water by which the health of citizens along the line of the canal might be injuriously .affected. That this duty was incumbent upon the defendant company is not denied; nor is it claimed by the plaintiff that prior to 1901 that duty was neglected.

[92]*92In July .and August, 1901 — that year and the two years following being verywet — 'the plaintiff’s wife complained to the employees of the defendant company that the canal was not propr erly drained, and that her family were made sick with malaria in consequence of such negligent drainage, and thereupon the supervisor of that part of the railroad track had it gone over and drained properly, as he thought, but not sufficiently, as the plaintiff claims.' Wherefore the plaintiff brought suit covering the period from August 11, 1901, to August 11, 1902, and subsequently brought another suit covering the period from November 11', 1902, to November 11, 1903, and by consent these suits were merged into one, so as to embrace these two periods, and tried as one case, with the result above stated.

The demurrer to the declarations was not urged in the oral argument here, and we deem it only necessary to' say with reference thereto that the court is of opinion that the declarations and each of the counts contained therein set out sufficiently and clearly a good cause of action.

Upon its plea of not guilty, the defendant company relied upon the theory, which appears to be a concession in the case, at all events the evidence in support of the theory is not contradicted, that malaria is caused by the bite of a mosquito of the genus anopheles, which itself must have become infected by sucking the blood of a patient suffering from the disease, thereby taking into its system the malarial parasite, and that at least the insect itself might just as well have been propagated on the premises of the plaintiff as in the old canal bed.

While the evidence showed that the plaintiff and his family suffered from malaria during the periods mentioned, and had suffered from it before, and that the conditions in the canal bed were sufficient for the propagation of the malarial insect, it also tended to show, that the conditions on the plaintiff’s own low-grounds, about his spring and about an excavation made near his dwelling for an icehouse, were equally, if not more, favorable for the development of the malarial mosquito than the conditions about the canal bed.

[93]*93The defendant company asked for five instructions, all of which were given as asked, except the third, and this was also given with a modification, this modification constituting the defendant company’s first bill of exceptions. This instruction, as given, is as follows, the modification or addendum appearing in italics:

“The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence that the sickness which the plaintiff claims to have suffered may as well have resulted from other causes as from stagnant water in the canal bed, then they must find for the defendant, unless they should, believe from the evidence that the said stagnant water was the principal and substantive cause oj the injury complained of even though other causes may have contributed to a lesser extent in which case they shall find for the plaintiff

Among the other instructions given for the defendant company is ISTo. 5, which is as follows:

“The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence that the plaintiff, by his own negligence, suffered or permitted stagnant water to remain in upon his own premises, which did contribute in any degree to cause the sickness of which he claims to have suffered, then they must find for the defendant.”

The jury were also instructed that if the defendant company had used reasonable and prudent means to keep. the canal bed drained, and to prevent the accumulation of stagnant water therein, they should find for the defendant, even though they may believe that by the exercise of greater care and skill, better and more efficient methods might have been employed to accomplish such purposes.. So that we have, as it appears to us, in instruction ISTo. 3, as modified, an instruction not only inconsistent with other instructions, but directly contradictory of instruction Ho. 5, thus constituting an error which may not be cured by other instructions given, as it cannot be said in such a case whether the jury were controlled by the one' or the other.

[94]*94N. & W. Ry. Co. v. Mann, 99 Va. 187, 37 S. E. 849; Winchester v. Carroll, Ibid 745, 40 S. E. 37; Va. & N. C. Wheel Co. v. Chalkeley, 98 Va. 62, 34 S. E. 976; Richmond Pass. & Power Co. v. Steger, 101 Va. 319, 43 S. E. 612, and authorities there cited.

Instruction Eo. 3, as asked, was a plain statement of the law applicable to one aspect of the company’s evidence not covered by other instructions, and the modification or addendum thereto is a misapplication to the case of the doctrine of concurrent negligence, viz: where concurrent negligence* of two persons injures a third person, the person injured can recover of either or both; or, if the concurrent or successive negligence of two persons combined results in an injury to a third person, he may recover damages of either or both, and neither can interpose the defense that the prior or concurrent negligence of the other contributed to the injury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 S.E. 182, 104 Va. 90, 1905 Va. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chesapeake-ohio-railway-co-v-whitlow-va-1905.