Southern Railway Co. v. Davis

147 S.E. 228, 152 Va. 548, 1929 Va. LEXIS 190
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 21, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 147 S.E. 228 (Southern Railway Co. v. Davis) 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. Davis, 147 S.E. 228, 152 Va. 548, 1929 Va. LEXIS 190 (Va. 1929).

Opinion

Prentis, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

[551]*551On the afternoon of May 7, 1921, Julius A. Davis, while driving a Ford truck, was killed on the grade crossing of the Southern Railway Company, at Clifton station, by a passenger train of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Company. His administrator sued both companies, and the trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff for $3,000.00, of which the defendants are here complaining.

As the location of the crossing is in the incorporated town of Clifton, it is conceded that Code, sections 3958, requiring specific signals from railway locomotives on approaching highway crossings, and 3959, providing that the contributory negligence on one injured at such a crossing shall not bar a recovery but only be considered in mitigation of damages, do not apply in this case. If the plaintiff’s intestate, the driver of the truck, was guilty of negligence which proximately contributed to his death, there can be no recovery, unless the last clear chance doctrine applies.

There is much in the briefs filed for the administrator, as to conflicts in the testimony, and their determination by the jury. As a matter of fact, however, the record discloses very few substantial conflicts. There were a number of eye-witnesses of the tragedy, some of whom heard signals which others did not hear, while some observed facts which others did not perceive. Such differences are natural and grow out of the fact that some people are more alert and see more than others, some have better memories, and some attribute more importance to certain circumstances than others who may have observed but forgotten the same facts.

This is a fair summary' of the undoubted facts which determine the case: The decedent lived on his [552]*552father’s farm about two miles away from the station which he frequented, and he was familiar with the crossing at Clifton at which he met his death. On the morning of the day of the occurrence he had driven the truck to Clifton about ten o’clock in the morning, and parked it in proximity to the railway station, about midway between the station and the highway, where it remained until he attempted to drive it across the railway track. As he approached the highway, before turning towards the crossing, at least six witnesses in the immediate vicinity testified that they were aware of the fact that the Chesapeake and Ohio train was then rapidly approaching. There were no curtains on the cab of the truck to obstruct the view, and the day was clear. No witness testified that the driver, the deceased, ever looked in the direction of the Chesapeake and Ohio train, then rapidly approaching on the southbound track, but there is testimony that he appeared to be looking in the opposite direction from which a freight train, was also approaching but upon the northbound track. The centre of the road crossing was eighty-two feet from the passenger station, and the corner of the station building was thirty-two and two-tents feet from the nearest rail of the south-bound track. At the place where his car had been parked, the passenger station obstructed the view of the southbound track, but as he drove his truck towards the highway, the view cleared. At a point on the highway forty-eight feet from the nearest rail of the southbound track on which the Chesapeake and Ohio train was approaching, and thirty-four feet from the nearest rail of the north-bound track, if one had been there and looked, he could have seen that train coming from the north on the south-bound track when it was 268 feet [553]*553distant. When ten feet closer, the unobstructed view from the highway was 567 feet, and when ten feet nearer — that is, when fourteen feet from the nearest rail of the north-bound track and twenty-eight feet from the nearest rail of the south-bound track, on which he was killed, the unobstructed view of that track was 1,705 feet. There is some evidence to the effect that there was cord-wood piled up back of the station. Box cars were on another track, but it is manifest that these only obstructed the view from the highway as it approached the crossing, but before the view from the highway became obstructed by the station building. As one neared the track, however, and passed the obstruction to the view which the station created, there was then nothing else to obstruct the view of the south-bound track. The evidence of one witness, that a traveler, on the highway had to be right on the track before he could see an approaching train, is manifestly inaccurate, because the parallel northbound track, which was next to the station and upon which trains were constantly passing, was unobstructed. Not only were both the north and south-bound tracks unobstructed, but there was in addition a space between the north-bound track and the station building sufficient to permit rapidly moving trains to pass in safety thereon, in which space the view was also unobstructed. Statements of this witness, if he intended to deny these physical facts, otherwise so clearly demonstrated, cannot be credited. There is no evidence that the driver of the truck ever looked in the direction from which the Chesapeake and Ohio train was so rapidly approaching, though some of the witnesses said that all they could say about this was that they did not see him look in that direction. One of his witnesses testified that he was [554]*554watching the freight train of the Southern. We must assume that if he had looked be would have stopped his truck, as this could have been easily and promptly done within a few feet, for it had just started and was moving slowly in low gear.

The plaintiffs counsel appears to rely upon the differences between the witnesses who heard the signals given by the approaching train and those who did not hear them, though in equally as good position to hear, as creating a conflict from which the jury were justified in concluding that the defendant company was guilty of negligence. This conclusion, even if justified by the weight of the evidence, did not relieve the deceased of the consequences of his own independent or concurring negligence in failing to look, or in driving upon the track from a place of safety.

In Boyd v. Southern Ry. Co., 115 Va. 14, 78 S. E. 549, Ann. Cas. 1914B, 1017, Buchanan, J., states the rule undoubtedly applicable, thus: “No general rule of law is better settled in this jurisdiction and generally, it is believed, than that while it is the duty of a railroad company to give notice of the approach of its train to a crossing, the reciprocal duty is imposed upon a person about to go on its track to exercise ordinary care and caution, whether it be a highway crossing or -a licensed way. The track itself is a proclamation of danger. It is his duty before going upon it to use his eyes and ears. If he fails to look and listen, as his duty requires him, and attempts to cross the track in front of a moving-train and is injured by it, his own act, his own negligence, so contributes to his injury that he is not entitled to recover, unless the railroad company after it discovered, or ought to have discovered, his peril, might, have avoided the injury by the exercise of ordinary [555]*555care. Johnson v. C. & O. Ry. Co., 91 Va. 171, 179, 21 S. E. 238; Washington, etc., R. Co. v. Lacey, 94 Va. 469, 475-6, 26 S. E. 834; Southern Ry. Co. v. Hansbrough, 107 Va. 733, 741-2, 60 S. E. 58; Morton’s Ex’r v. Southern Ry. Co., 112 Va. 398, 405-6, 71 S. E. 561.”

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Bluebook (online)
147 S.E. 228, 152 Va. 548, 1929 Va. LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-railway-co-v-davis-va-1929.