Gordon's Adm'r v. Director General of Railroads

104 S.E. 796, 128 Va. 426, 1920 Va. LEXIS 113
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 18, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 104 S.E. 796 (Gordon's Adm'r v. Director General of Railroads) 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
Gordon's Adm'r v. Director General of Railroads, 104 S.E. 796, 128 Va. 426, 1920 Va. LEXIS 113 (Va. 1920).

Opinion

Prentis, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff in error complains of a judgment in favor of the defendant in error in an action for the recovery of damages for the death of Fannie Gordon.

The cause of action arose at Shipman, a station on the Southern Railway, at a highway crossing immediately at and alongside of the station building. There were three railroad tracks running north and south, namely, the house track, located at the east end of and immediately adjacent to the depot building; next to the east was the southbound track, upon which the accident occurred, over which all southbound trains were run; then east of that was the northbound track, over which all northbound trains were run. The depot was set back from the tracks on the public [429]*429road, but was located at the northwest comer of the crossing, with the house track on its east side and the public highway on the south side. There was no space provided for persons lawfully at the station, except the building, the public road and the railroad right of way. All northbound local passenger trains, when stopped at this station to discharge and receive passengers, stood across the highway crossing, and no provision had been made on the east side of the northbound track for discharging or receiving passengers at this place, but they were required to alight from and board the cars on the west side of the train, and thus to use and occupy the ground covered by the southbound track, the house track, the highway crossing, and such other space as the station and right of way might afford; so that incoming passengers, whose ultimate destination was on the east side of the railroad were compelled to wait until after the northbound train had finished discharging and receiving passengers and departed.

The plaintiff’s intestate, Fannie Gordon, alighted from the local northbound passenger train from Lynchburg on December 24, 1918, in the usual way, on the west side of the train adjacent to the southbound track, and was forced to wait for that train to clear the road crossing so as to allow her to go to her home at Wood’s Hotel,, immediately at the station, on the east side of and about forty feet from the railway track. She had been standing at the place indicated, or thereabouts, waiting for the northbound train to.depart, and after it left the station and opened the crossing, when proceeding or about to proceed, she was struck and killed by a train running south on the southbound track.

The contention upon which the plaintiff bases his claim to recover is presented in two aspects: First, that his intestate was guilty of no contributory negligence, because it had been the custom for passengers to alight in the space indicated; that it had also been customary for southbound [430]*430trains to come to a stop until the northbound train had left the station, and there was an applicable rule on the subject reading thus: “Trains must use caution when passing a-train receiving or discharging passengers at a station, and must not pass between it and the platform at which the passengers are being received or discharged.” Second, that even if the deceased was guilty of contributory negligence, the southbound train failed to give the statutory crossing signal, and that she was standing so close to the rails of the southbound track upon which there was an' unobstructed view for a long distance, say for a mile or more, that it was the duty of the agents of the defendant to observe that she was oblivious of her position of danger, to do all in their power to avoid injuring her, and the doctrine generally spoken of as the last clear chance, or discovered peril, is invoked.

On the other hand, the company claims exemption from liability because it avers that Mrs. Gordon stepped from a safe place suddenly in front of the train, in execution of her purpose to cross the track; that all the necessary warning signals had.been given; and that the engineer had no notice or reason to suspect she would attempt thus suddenly to cross the track until it was too late to stop the train.

The trial court took the defendant’s view, and so instructed the jury. The exceptions of the plaintiff in error relate to the giving and refusal of instructions, based upon this view.

[1, 2] Taking up first the contention of the defendant company, we have no doubt whatever that if the facts are as presented by the defendant’s witnesses, it cannot be questioned that Mrs. Gordon is herself responsible for her sudden and deplorable death. Certainly there is no doubt as to this conclusion, which is supported by reason and authority. Even if there be some antecedent negligence by those operating a railway train, still if one who is in the [431]*431full possession of his faculties steps upon a railroad track, in full view of and immediately in front of a rapidly approaching train, and thus meets death, his administrator cannot recover, because the decedent’s own negligence is the proximate cause thereof. There is evidence in this case 0 to justify this version of the fatality, and the defendant was entitled to have it presented to the jury in the instructions. We cannot accede to the contention for the plaintiff, that, because in alighting from the northbound train Mrs. Gordon was forced to alight next to the southbound track, therefore she can be excused for remaining upon the southbound track, or in such close proximity thereto, as to be struck by a passing train thereon, when it appears that she had ample opportunity to get to a position of safety as all the other passengers who alighted from the same train did on this occasion. While there may be circumstances under which a pedestrian is forced to occupy such a position of danger, and hence is not negligent, he cannot, escape the imputation of negligence if he continues to occupy it when it is unnecessary to do so. It is but the work of an instant for a pedestrian to see and to realize his danger under such circumstances, and requires only a step or two to reach a place of safety. So that the first contention of the plaintiff — that is, that Mrs. Gordon was guilty of no negligence, or that the jury might determine from the evidence whether she was or was not negligent, is unsound. Her negligence is manifest. The trial court properly so instructed the jury and it is not necessary to cite authority therefor to support the ruling, for it is firmly based upon justice and right reason; and we believe that it is everywhere accepted.

The court, however, refused to grant any instructions based upon the last clear chance doctrine. There is the usual sharp conflict in the testimony, but that upon which the plaintiff relies and upon which this view of the case is [432]*432based, may be thus summarized: Mrs. Gordon, while waiting for the northbound train to clear the crossing, met Mr. Milton Kidd, and they had a conversation relating to a sum of money which Kidd owed and paid her on that, occasion, and while still conversing there, according to the plaintiff’s testimony, Kidd standing within three and a half feet of the west rail of the southbound track, and Mrs. Gordon at least a foot and a half closer to that rail and not looking in the direction from which the southbound train was approaching, and just as, or after, the northbound train had cleared the crossing, was struck and instantly killed. It is not clear even from the plaintiff’s testimony, whether she still occupied the same position, and had turned to start across the track, or had actually started across it at that time.

[3]

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Bluebook (online)
104 S.E. 796, 128 Va. 426, 1920 Va. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordons-admr-v-director-general-of-railroads-va-1920.