Gleeson v. Virginia Midland Railroad

140 U.S. 435, 11 S. Ct. 859, 35 L. Ed. 458, 1891 U.S. LEXIS 2477
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 11, 1891
Docket287
StatusPublished
Cited by160 cases

This text of 140 U.S. 435 (Gleeson v. Virginia Midland Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gleeson v. Virginia Midland Railroad, 140 U.S. 435, 11 S. Ct. 859, 35 L. Ed. 458, 1891 U.S. LEXIS 2477 (1891).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Lamar,

having made the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

It will be most convenient in the decision of this case to consider the third instruction first. The'objections made to it are three:

(1.) “ It assumes that the accident was caused by an act of God, in the sense in which that term is technically used.” It appears that the accident was caused by a land slide, which occurred in a cut some fifteen or twenty feet' deep. The defendant gave evidence tending to prove that rain had fallen on the afternoon of Friday and on the Saturday morning previous; and the claim is that the slide was produced by the loosening of the earth by the rain. We do not think such an ordinary occurrence is embraced by the technical phrase “ an act of God.” There was no. evidence that the rain was of extraordinary character, or that any extraordinary results followed it. It was a common, natural event; such as not only might have been foreseen as probable, but also must have been foreknown as certain to come. Against such an event it was the duty of the company to have guarded. Extraordinary floods, storms of unusual violence, sudden tempests, severe frosts, great droughts, lightnings, earthquakes, sudden deaths and illnesses, have been held to be acts of God ”; but we know of no instance in which a rain of not unusual violence, and the probable results thereof, in softening the superficial earth, have been so considered. In Dorman v. Ames, [440]*44012 Minnesota, 451, it was held that a man is negligent if he fail to take precautions against such rises of high waters as are usual and ordinary, and reasonably to be anticipated at certain seasons of the year; and we think the same principle applies to this case. Ewart v. Street, 2 Bailey (S. C.) 157, 162; Moffat v. Strong, 10 Johns. 11; New Brunswick Steamboat Co. v. Tiers, 4 Zabr. (24 N. J. Law) 697; Great Western Railway v. Braid, 1 Moore P. C. (N. S.) 101.

(2.) The instruction does not hold the defendant responsible for the condition of the sides of the cut made by it in the construction of the road, the giving way of which caused the accident.” We think this objection is also well taken. The railroad cut is as much a part of the railroad structure as is • the fill. They are both necessary and both are intended for one result; which is the production of a level track over which the trains may be propelled. The cut is made by the company no less than the fill; and the banks are not the result of natural causes, but of the direct intervention of the company’s work. If it be the duty of the company (as it unquestionably is) in the erection of the fills and the necessary bridges, to so construct them that they shall be reasonably safe, and to maintain them in a reasonably safe condition, no reason can be assigned why the same duty should not exist in regard to the cuts. Just as surely as the laws of gravity will cause a heavy train to fall through a defective or rotten bridge to the destruction of life, just so surely will those same laws cause land slides and consequent dangerous obstructions to the track itself, from ill-constructed railway cuts. To all intents and purposes a railroad track which runs through a cut where the banks are so near and so steep that the usual.laws of .gravity will bring upon the track the debris, created by the common processes of nature, is overhung by those banks. Ordinary skill would enable the engineers to foresee the result, and ordinary prudence should lead the company to guard against it. To hold any other view would be to overbalance the priceless - lives of the travelling public by a mere item of increased expense in the construction of railroads; and after all, an item, in the great number of cases, of no great moment.

[441]*441In a late case in the Queen’s Bench Division, Tarry v. Ashton, 1 Q. B. D. 314, two out of three judges declared in substance that a man who, for his own benefit, suspends an object, or permits it to be suspended, over the highway, and puts the public safety in peril thereby, is under an absolute duty .to keep it in such a state as not to be. dangerous. The facts of the case were these: The defendant became the lessee and occupier of a house, from the front of which a heavy lamp projected several feet over the public foot pavement. As the plaintiff was walking along in November, the lamp fell on her and injured her. It appeared that in the previous August the defendant employed an experienced gas-fitter to put the lamp in repair. At the time of the accident a person employed by defendant was blowing the water out of the gas-pipes of the lamp, and in doing this a ladder was raised against the lamp-iron or bracket, from which the lamp hung'; and on the man mounting the ladder, owing to the wind and wet, the ladder slipped, and he, to save himself, clung to the lamp-iron, and the shaking caused the lamp to fall. On examination, it was discovered, that the fastening by which the lamp-was attached to jbhe lamp-iron was in a decayed state. The jury found that there had been negligence on the part of the defendant personally; that the lamp was out of repair through general decay, but not to the knowledge of the defendant; that the immediate cause of the fall of the lamp was the slipping of the ladder; but that if the lamp had been in good repair, the slipping of the ladder would not. have caused the fall. Upon this it was held by Lush and Quain, JJ., that the plaintiff was entitled to a verdict on the ground that if a person maintains a lamp projecting over the highway for his own purposes, it is his duty to maintain it so as not to be dangerous to persons passing by; and if it causes injuries, owing to a want of repair, it is no answer on his part that he had employed a competent man to repair it. 1 Thomp. on Negligence, 346-7.

The case of Kearney v. London &c. Railway, L. R. 6 Q. B. 759, 762, 763, (in the Exchequer Chamber,) cited in the brief of counsel for plaintiff in error, is directly in point. In that ■case the plaintiff had been injured while walking along a pub-[442]*442lie highway, by a brick which fell from a pier of the defendant’s bridge. . A train had just passed, and the counsel for the-defendant submitted that there was no evidence of negligence. The court (Kelly, Chief Baron,) says: “ There can be no doubt that .it was the duty of the defendants,- who had built this' bridge over the highway, to take such care that, where danger can be reasonably avoided, the safety of the public using the highway should be provided fon The question,, therefore, is,- whether there was. any evidence of negligence on the part of the defendants; and by that we all understand such an amount of evidence as to fairly and reasonably support the finding of the jury. The Lord Chief Justice, in his judgment in the court below, said, res ipsa loquitur, and I cannot do better than to refer to that judgment. It appears, without contradiction, that a brick fell out of a pier of the bridge without any assignable cause except the slight vibration caused by a passing train. This, we think, is not only evidence, but conclusive evidence, that it was loose; for otherwise ■ so slight a vibration could not have struck it out- of its place. . . . The bridge had been built two or three years, and it was the duty of the defendants from time to time to inspect the bridge,, and ascertain that the brickwork was in good order and all the-bricks well secured.”

The principle of these decisions seems to us to be applicable-to this case.

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Bluebook (online)
140 U.S. 435, 11 S. Ct. 859, 35 L. Ed. 458, 1891 U.S. LEXIS 2477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gleeson-v-virginia-midland-railroad-scotus-1891.