Norfolk & Western Railway Co. v. Chrisman

247 S.E.2d 457, 219 Va. 184, 1978 Va. LEXIS 177
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedAugust 31, 1978
DocketRecord 770474
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 247 S.E.2d 457 (Norfolk & Western Railway Co. v. Chrisman) 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
Norfolk & Western Railway Co. v. Chrisman, 247 S.E.2d 457, 219 Va. 184, 1978 Va. LEXIS 177 (Va. 1978).

Opinion

CARRICO, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

By motion for judgment filed in the court below, Marvin E. Chrisman sought to recover from Norfolk and Western Railway Company (hereinafter, N&W) damages for personal injuries sustained when the door of a boxcar fell on him while he was unloading the car for his employer, Southern States Cooperative, *186 Incorporated. * In a jury trial, Chrisman was granted instructions upon theories of both proven negligence and res ipsa loquitur. The trial resulted in a verdict in favor of Chrisman for $100,000.

N&W moved to set the verdict aside. Concluding that it had erred in instructing the jury upon the theory of res ipsa loquitur, the trial court granted the motion and, over N&W’s objection, ordered a new trial. Upon instructions granted Chrisman relating solely to a theory of proven negligence, the second jury returned a verdict in favor of Chrisman for $115,000. The court confirmed this verdict.

On appeal, N&W’s principal assignments of error present the question whether, upon the evidence submitted at the first trial, final judgment should have been entered in favor of N&W after the first verdict was set aside. Accordingly, we shall examine the evidence presented at the first trial. This evidence shows that N&W owned the boxcar in question and furnished it for loading at the Southern States mill in Roanoke. After Southern States’ employees had loaded the car with sacks of feed, N&W transported the car and delivered it to a siding adjacent to the Southern States store at Luray, in Page County.

The boxcar door, six feet wide and ten feet high, was made of steel, and it weighed approximately 400 pounds. Resting upon and attached to a lower rail, the door was held in place at the top by an upper guide or track. This guide or track consisted of a “Z-bar,” or angle iron, one-quarter inch thick and 12 feet 6 inches long, the outer portion of which cupped over the top of the door. When the door was closed, its top extended into the upper guide approximately one inch. When opened and raised on rollers designed to carry it along the lower rail, the door was elevated into the upper guide an additional 1/16 inch.

On July 13, 1971, Chrisman was assigned to unload the car. Standing on the platform of Southern States’ store, he attempted to *187 open the car door by hand. Unsuccessful in his attempt, he secured from inside the store a “come-along,” a crank-pulley device he, as well as railroad employees, customarily used to open boxcar doors. He hooked one end of the “come-along” to the handle of the door and the other to the ladder at the end of the car, placing the device in a horizontal position. Kneeling on one knee while cranking the device, he moved along with the door as it opened. When the door was approximately two-thirds open, it came out of the upper track and fell on Chrisman, pinning him to the platform. He was extricated by a fellow employee.

Examination of the boxcar by railroad employees shortly after the accident revealed a defect in the upper door guide, consisting of an area where the outer portion of the guide was “bulged out” by as much as one inch over a length of six inches to one foot. The metal in this and a larger adjacent area, “at some time or another,” had been “heated and straightened,” and the metal was “awful rusty.” According to one railroad employee, “it looked like the door had come out” where the upper track was defective. Another railroad employee acknowledged that, if the “come-along” was “hooked up” in a horizontal position, the door “would not have come off . . . unless there had been some defect in the door or the track.”

N&W contends initially that final judgment should have been entered in its favor after the first verdict was set aside because the evidence was insufficient as a matter of law to show any negligence on its part. Relying upon Veale v. Railway Company, 205 Va. 822, 139 S.E.2d 797 (1965), N&W seems to suggest that it was only an intermediate carrier and that, as such, it owed no duty to inspect the boxcar in question to determine whether it was in a safe condition for unloading.

Veale does stand for the proposition that an intermediate carrier owes no duty to inspect a car to determine whether it is safe for unloading. But Veale also stands for the proposition that a railroad carrier’s duty varies as its relation to the car varies, depending upon whether the railroad company is sought to be held liable as the initial, the intermediate, or the delivering carrier.

In the present case, N&W was not only the intermediate carrier but also the initial and the delivering carrier. As the initial carrier, *188 N&W owed to the employees of the consignee, Southern States, who would be required to unload the car, the duty to exercise ordinary care to furnish a car in such condition that it could be unloaded with reasonable safety. Yandell v. National Fireproofing Corp., 239 N.C. 1, 6, 79 S.E.2d 223, 226 (1953). As the delivering carrier, N&W owed to those same employees the duty, in the exercise of ordinary care, to inspect the car to determine whether it was reasonably safe for unloading and to repair or give warning of any dangerous condition discoverable by the inspection. Veale, 205 Va. at 826-27, 139 S.E.2d at 800; Yandell, 239 N.C.1 at 6, 79 S.E.2d at 227. The required inspection should have been sufficiently thorough to determine whether there was “any fairly obvious defect in [the car’s] construction or state of repair which constitute[d] a likely source of danger.” Ambrose v. Western Maryland Railway Co., 368 Pa. 1, 7-8, 81 A.2d 895, 898 (1951).

In the present case, the evidence established conclusively that a defect existed in the upper door guide after the accident. And the evidence justified the conclusion that, if the defect preexisted the accident, the defect caused the door to fall out and strike Chrisman. N&W argues, however, that the evidence was insufficient to establish that the defect preexisted the accident or that, if it did, its presence would have been discoverable by a reasonable inspection.

We disagree with N&W. In the first place, evidence of the existence of the defect after the accident tended to show that the defect preexisted the accident. Hagan v. Hicks, 209 Va. 499, 504, 165 S.E.2d 421, 425 (1969); Hall v. Hockaday, 206 Va. 792, 797, 146 S.E.2d 215, 218 (1966). Furthermore, the “awful rusty” condition of the metal in the defective area justified the inference that the defect had existed for an appreciable period before the accident.

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Bluebook (online)
247 S.E.2d 457, 219 Va. 184, 1978 Va. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norfolk-western-railway-co-v-chrisman-va-1978.