Perkins v. Director General of Railroads

112 S.E. 839, 133 Va. 242, 1922 Va. LEXIS 95
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 15, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 112 S.E. 839 (Perkins 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
Perkins v. Director General of Railroads, 112 S.E. 839, 133 Va. 242, 1922 Va. LEXIS 95 (Va. 1922).

Opinion

Kelly, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action by Mrs. Hattie E. Perkins against the Director General of Railroads for personal injuries sustained by her in a collision between a horse and buggy which she was driving and one of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad passenger trains. The jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiff, assessing the damages at $5,000, but the trial court, on motion of the defendant, set the verdict aside, and, pursuant to the provisions of section 6251 of the Code, entered final judgment for the defendant. To that judgment this writ of error was awarded.

The accident occurred in the daytime at a railroad crossing on Hawk street in the city of Petersburg. To fix the points of the compass approximately, it may be said that at the crossing Hawk street runs east and west and the railroad north and south. The plaintiff was driving west on Hawk street and the train was going north. A few minutes prior to the accident the plaintiff, who was familiar with the situation at the crossing, drove alon'g Hawk street from the east and stopped seventy-six feet from the east rail of the track. From that point she sent her twelve-year old son, who accompanied her, with a message to her husband, who was on the other side of the track at work in a manufacturing plant. She waited just where she had stopped until the little boy returned, [245]*245and from that position she could see a train, if one should be coming from the south, as it emerged from the mouth of a cut to her left about 800 feet in a straight line from her, and about 817 feet south of the crossing. If she had gone any further west and stopped, unless she had gone so far that the horse’s head' would have been within a few feet of the rails, her view would have been cut off by an intervening bank or hill on the left side of the street. She remained in that position, seventy-six feet from the track, looking and listening all the while for a train, until she saw her son coming back. As he reached the crossing she called to him to look for a train, and he looked and listened from a point in the center of the track, saw and heard none, and answered, “All right, mama.” He came on at once, got into the buggy, tucked a lap robe around his feet as a protection against the drizzling rain which was falling, and they then started ahead to make the crossing. The horse was moving in a swift walk, and they continued to look and listen for a train. After passing the bank or hill on her left and at a distance of about thirty feet from the nearest rail, the plaintiff could have seen a train from the south about 400 feet away. The track in that direction from the crossing curved to the left as it ran back to the cut above mentioned, and her view would have gradually extended to the cut as she got nearer the rails. According to her testimony she continued to look and listen, but neither saw nor heard a train until her horse was about to stop on the track. It is not possible to say certainly just where the train was when she first realized its approach. The defendant contends that it was right at her side. A fair view of the evidence as a whole, however, is that it was some distance away. She and several other [246]*246witnesses, including some introduced by the defendant, testified that she tried to pull the horse back from the track before she was struck, and both she and her son testified that after they saw the train she called to him to get out of the buggy, that he did get out after disengaging his feet from the lap robe, and ran back six or seven steps before the accident occurred. It is true that at one point in her testimony she says that the train was right on her when the emergency whistle blew, and that she saw and heard the train all about the same time, but the evidence as a whole demonstrates that this part of it cannot be construed literally. The defendant’s witness, Grigg, a yard conductor, who saw the accident, testified that the emergency whistle was blown just after the engine “popped around that' curve, right at the distance, I suppose, of the switch stand” (the switch stand being several hundred feet from the crossing); and this is not only consistent with a fair interpretation of the testimony of the engineer of the train, but with the undisputed fact that after the plaintiff saw and heard the train, time enough intervened for her to make an effort, observed by many witnesses, to pull the horse back, and for her son to throw off the lap robe, get out of the buggy and run back six or seven steps to the rear before the accident actually happened.

These further material facts, although in some particulars disputed by the defendant, were supported by testimony on behalf of the plaintiff which warranted the jury in believing it to be true:

The whistle was not blown, the bell was not rung, and no other warning of the train’s approach was given except the emergency alarm, sounded after the engineer saw that the accident was about to happen.

The railroad authorities, although not required [247]*247to do so by any ordinance of the city, had placed at the crossing an automatic gong intended to warn pedestrians and drivers of vehicles when trains were approaching. This gong was then and had been for some days out of order, and it failed to work on this occasion.

There was an ordinance of the city providing that trains should not cross any street at a greater rate of speed than six miles an hour. This train was running at the rate of about forty miles an hour.

The order of the court shows that the verdict was set aside and judgment rendered for the defendant solely on the ground that the finding of the jury was contrary to the evidence and without evidence to support it. We are of opinion that this was error.

The primary negligence of the defendant is clearly established by the plaintiff’s evidence, and all the conflicts in the testimony were settled adversely to the defendant by the verdict. This was fully appreciated and recognized by the learned judge of the trial court, whose written opinion, while not a part of the record, has been furnished to ils by counsel. The opinion shows that the decision below was reached on the theory that the plaintiff’s “seeing and hearing the train was contemporaneous with the collision,” and that her negligence in failing to see and hear sooner than she did was the supervening and proximate cause of the injury. From what has already been said, it will be seen that we do not think this theory is necessarily sustained by the evidence. Upon the contrary, the jury might well have found that the plaintiff’s horse was within a few feet of the track before the train could have been seen or heard, and that when the plaintiff did see or hear it, or both, it was still some distance away, though her horse was [248]*248then just about to step on the track. If her seeing and hearing had been contemporaneous with the collision, there would have been no time for the witnesses to see her, as they did, attempting to pull the horse back from the track, and no time for her to tell the boy to get out and for him to obey and run back several feet, as he undoubtedly did, before the collision occurred. She did not have the right, of course, to go blindly on the track, or to depend entirely on the gong at the crossing, or on signals from the bell and whistle which it was the duty of the defendant’s employees to give, or on the slow rate of speed at which the train would have been running if it had obeyed the ordinance.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 S.E. 839, 133 Va. 242, 1922 Va. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perkins-v-director-general-of-railroads-va-1922.