Southern Railway Co. v. Bruce's Adm'r

33 S.E. 548, 97 Va. 92, 1899 Va. LEXIS 15
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 6, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 33 S.E. 548 (Southern Railway Co. v. Bruce's Adm'r) 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
Southern Railway Co. v. Bruce's Adm'r, 33 S.E. 548, 97 Va. 92, 1899 Va. LEXIS 15 (Va. 1899).

Opinion

Cardwell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit brought in the Corporation Court of the city of Danville by the administrator of L. R. Bruce, to recover damages for the death of Brace, caused, as is alleged, by the negligence of the Southern Railway Company, and the verdict and judgment is for the plaintiff for the sum of $5,350, to which judgment the defendant company was awarded a writ of error by this court.

The Southern Railway enters North Dánville upon the north side of Dan River, making with the river, as it approaches, an acute angle with its point to the south and its opening to the north. The depot in North Danville is at the point where the railroad is nearest to the river, and from there it rans down the bank of the river some distance, and then crosses it to the south side, where the city of Danville is situated. About a half mile north of the depot in North Danville, a public road from Danville to Henry Courthouse crosses the railroad, and at this crossing this road is called Henry street. Near by is situated the station [94]*94signal post, and the steepest g’rade is from that signal post, something over a quarter of a mile southward, to a trestle which crosses a deep ravine. This trestle is situated just at a point where the line of the railroad from the north turns on a sharp curve to the left, so as to become nearly parallel to the river, and near the south end of this curve is situated the main building of the Riverside Cotton Mills. The space between the railroad and the river, beginning at the trestle and running almost all the way down to the depot, belongs to the Riverside Cotton Mills Co., and the centre of its principal building is a little south of the south end of the trestle. The streets of North Danville do not cross the railroad at any point opposite the property of the Riverside Cotton Mills Co., but stop at the east line of the railroad company’s right of way. There are paths down the incline of these streets, used largely by employees at the Cotton Mills and persons working in the mills and factories on the south side of the river in the city of Danville; and in Pickett street, the nearest of these streets to the trestle, therg are wooden ste^i coming down the incline of the street twenty or twenty-five ^feet, connecting with a .platform over the space between the foot of the embankment and the end of the railroad ties, just opposite the entrance of the main building of the Cotton Mills. Upon the western side of the railroad is a fence nearly the entire length of the Riverside Cotton Mills property, eight feet high, put up by the latter company. Upon the eastern side there is no fence, but an embankment, the highest portion of it being on the inside of the sharp curve in the railroad, near the trestle, where it is from fifteen to twenty feet high; and upon both sides of the railroad track from the trestle to a point some distance past the place where the accident occurred, which is the subject of this suit, there is a space sufficiently wide for pedestrians to walk. The one on the east side of the railroad track, and between it and the embankment, is narrow, however, and serves principally to catch and carry off surface water from the high ground [95]*95adjacent, while that on the west side of the railroad track, between it and the fence in front of the Riverside Cotton Mills property, is much wider, and affords ample space and a convenient walkway for travellers. This space is at no point less than four feet wide, and at others as much as twelve or more feet, there being nothing thereon to obstruct it as a walkway to some distance below where the accident occurred, unless it be the iron bars connecting the rails of the side-track, with the switching post set within the fence at a point a little below the place of the accident, which are not more than three or four inches from the ground.

The deceased, a young man about nineteen years of age, in good health, and his eyesight and hearing not at all impaired, had been in North Danville two days prior to his death, boarding at the house of one Cobb, in full view of the railroad and its trains passing in and.out of North Danville at all hours of the day and night. His mission to North Danville was to get work, as Cobb, with whom he was boarding, testified; and, on the morning of July 27, 1897, he left Cobb’s house at an early hour, and about half past six o’clock entered upon the railroad at or near the north end of the trestle of which we have been speaking, and, crossing the deep ravine there either over or under the trestle, he continued southward on the railroad track towards the depot. He had passed the main entrance to the largest building of the cotton mills, and was opposite the clearance post, just above where a side-track to the storage warehouse of the cotton mills makes off from the main track of the railroad, when he was struck and killed by the Washington and Southern Limited Express train No. 37, of the defendant company, going south, which was running into North Danville an hour behind its schedule time.

iA.t the trial of this cause the court gave seven instructions asked for by the plaintiff, to two of which, Nos. 1 and 7, the defendant company excepted. They are as follows:

[96]*96“ 1. The court instructs the jury that a railroad company running and operating its trains through a city, where its track and right of way is constantly used as a footway by large numbers of men, women and children passing over it daily, and at all times, must use greater care and diligence to prevent injuries to persons and property than is required of them in running and operating their trains in less frequented and populous localities, and so in certain localities in the town greater precaution may be necessary than in others, for example, if the train is being canned around a curve, objects or persons on the other side of which are hidden from view, it is required of them to resort to special precautions, depending upon the particular locality and the circumstances, to avoid accidents, and any neglect of such precautions as are proper under the peculiar suiTounding circumstances of the locality, constitutes negligence for which the railroad company is liable in damages, unless the plaintiff’s intestate, by the exercise of ordinary care on his part, could have prevented the accident; and the burden of proof is on the railroad company to prove such absence of ordinary care on the part of the plaintiff’s intestate.”
7. The court further instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence that the road-bed and track of the defendant company, at and near the point where the plaintiff’s intestate is alleged to have been killed, was situated in the city of Danville, Va., and that, owing to sharp curves in the said tracks, and embankments alongside of it, and other obstructions on the side of and near said track at and near that point, the engineer was prevented from seeing objects upon the track in front of the train at as great a distance as he otherwise could have seen such objects, and that he was prevented from seeing them at a sufficient distance to stop his train before running upon them when running at the rate of speed usually maintained at or near said point, and that large numbers of men, women and children daily passed along and upon defendant’s track at and near that point, [97]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 S.E. 548, 97 Va. 92, 1899 Va. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-railway-co-v-bruces-admr-va-1899.