Higgins v. Southern Railway Co.

83 S.E. 380, 116 Va. 890, 1914 Va. LEXIS 103
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 12, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 83 S.E. 380 (Higgins v. Southern Railway 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
Higgins v. Southern Railway Co., 83 S.E. 380, 116 Va. 890, 1914 Va. LEXIS 103 (Va. 1914).

Opinion

Cardwell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff in this action, George W. Higgins, is the owner and occupant of a farm situated about six miles west of the town of Orange, on the line of the Southern Railway Company, and on the morning of July 3, 1911, sent his driver, one Humphrey Jones, an elderly negro man, accompanied by plaintiff’s son, George W. Higgins, Jr., a lad of seventeen years, to the home of one Harrison Johnson, to bring Johnson’s wife, plaintiff’s cook, back to plaintiff’s home. A farm wagon, drawn by two horses, was the conveyance put in use, the driver, Jones, and young Higgins occupying the front seat thereon. Johnson’s house was situated on the road leading to the town of Orange, and in order to go there from plaintiff’s farm and return it was necessary to cross the railway right of way and track at a certain crossing commonly known and spoken of as Kinzer’s crossing. The trip to Johnson’s past the crossing was made in safety, but on the return trip with the cook, her three children (one about eight years of age, one about seven and the other a baby) together with some furniture or household goods, occupying the wagon on the rear of the driver’s seat, the wagon collided with a through fast north-bound passenger train of the defendant railway company, on the Kinzer crossing, resulting in the destruction of the wagon and the killing of the driver, Jones, the woman, her baby and both horses.

[892]*892In this action the plaintiff seeks to recover of the defendant for the loss of his wagon, horses and harness, claimed to have been of the value of $750, and upon a trial of the cause, upon the plea of the defendant of the general issue, and after the plaintiff had introduced his evidence in chief and the defendant the testimony of two witnesses, the defendant interposed a demurrer to the evidence, in which demurrer the plaintiff joined, whereupon the jury assessed the damages of the plaintiff at $750, subject to the opinion of the court upon the demurrer to the evidence, and the court at its next term, in June, 1912, sustained the demurrer and entered its judgment for the defendant with costs, to which judgment this writ of error was awarded the plaintiff.

The negligence alleged in the declaration is, (1) that the defendant failed to blow its whistle for Kinzer’s crossing, as required by the statute, until it was too late to do so effectually; (2) that it was also negligent because the bell on its engine was not ringing; and (3) that it was grossly negligent because it allowed trees, overhanging boughs and branches, telegraph poles and woods to so obscure its tracks at and beyond said crossing that any person approaching it from the east side thereof and traveling the public road or highway could not see a north-bound train approaching until such person reached the track, or so near thereto that a collision with the train could not be avoided.

The defendant offered no evidence at the trial to refute the evidence of the plaintiff, except that given by E. M. Averill and W. E. Clowes, who visited the scene of the accident after it had happened and took some photographic views showing, or purporting to show, the position of certain objects on the defendant’s right of way with reference to the crossing, tending to contradict some of the evidence introduced for the plaintiff.

[893]*893In its assignment of grounds for demurrer to the evidence, the defendant made the contention, first, that the plaintiff had failed to show by the evidence negligence on the part of the defendant, and, second, that the evidence of the plaintiff showed such negligence on the part of his agent and servant as bars a recovery in this action.

The defendant in the argument of the case here abandoned its first ground of demurrer and admits that the evidence does not sustain its contention as to that ground, so that the only question for consideration is whether or not the defendant’s second ground of de.murrer to the evidence is well taken, viz: “That the evidence of the plaintiff, Geo. W. Higgins, shows such negligence on his part as bars a recovery in this action.”

The evidence discloses no unusual conditions which would take the case out of the control of the general doctrine with respect to the relative duties of the plaintiff and the defendant in an ordinary crossing case. It unmistakably appears—in fact, it is admitted—that the defendant on the occasion of this accident neither blew the whistle on its engine at the distance from the crossing prescribed and required by statute, nor was the bell thereon ringing as the crossing was approached, to warn persons traveling the public highway that a train was approaching the crossing, nor was. there any other signal from the engine given except two short, sharp blasts of its whistle when too late to warn the driver of plaintiff’s wagon of the approaching train in time for him to stop and keep off the crossing.

Plaintiff’s wagon was an ordinary farm wagon, approaching the crossing from the east, traveling a public highway, and the evidence is that the train which collided with the wagon on the crossing was running at a rate of speed of “from 40 to 50 miles an hour, or maybe [894]*894more,” and making no nnnsnal noise. The only eyewitness to the accident in question who testifies in the case is G-eorge W. Higgins, Jr., who was sitting on the front seat of the wagon by the side of the driver and had equal opportunity with him to have seen the approaching train, could it have been seen in time to stop the team before it reached the railway track. He states that when in about forty yards of the crossing “they checked up and the team walked, just moved in a slow walk, and then were started on at a fast walk or. a little trot maybe,” towards the crossing, not having heard or seen a train approaching, and that when he first saw the train it was about twenty-five or thirty yards up the track approaching the crossing so rapidly that he had just time enough before the collision to jump from the wagon' to the ground at. a point about four feet from the railway track; that the engine- struck the wagon just in rear of its front wheel, knocking some of it thirty feet in the air and the Johnson woman thirty feet down the track. He testifies as to other conditions after the accident going to show that the train was traveling at such a rate of speed that it was impossible for the wagon to have been kept off of the track after the train could have been seen by him, or the driver of the wagon sitting at his side. He also testifies as to obstructions of the view of the approaching train by trees and their branches on and along the right of way. As to these obstructions of the view from the wagon as it entered upon the defendant’s' right of way, the witness, Higgins, is corroborated by-other witnesses for the plaintiff, who describe these obstructions as being- an oak tree standing entirely on' the right of way at its intersection with the public road and forked into two branches about five feet above the ground where its diameter was about two feet, and from one of its branches- a limb extended six feet out towards the [895]*895railway track, as did other branches from trees growing on the southern line of defendant’s right of way for a lesser distance, all of which served to obstruct the view of the occupants of plaintiff’s wagon of the train approaching the crossing from the south.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 S.E. 380, 116 Va. 890, 1914 Va. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/higgins-v-southern-railway-co-va-1914.