Southern Railway Co. v. Jones

56 S.E. 155, 106 Va. 412, 1907 Va. LEXIS 102
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 17, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 56 S.E. 155 (Southern Railway Co. v. Jones) 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. Jones, 56 S.E. 155, 106 Va. 412, 1907 Va. LEXIS 102 (Va. 1907).

Opinion

Cardwell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This action was brought by J. O. Jones, Jr., by his father and next friend to recover damages of the Southern Eailway Company for injuries alleged to have been sustained by reason of the negligence of the defendant company in the operation and management of one of its through passenger trains, commonly known as the “vestibule.” Upon the trial of the cause the defendant company demurred to the evidence; its demurrer was overruled, and a judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff for $1,000, the amount of damages ascertained by the jury subject to the ruling of the court on the demurrer to the evidence. To that judgment this writ of error was awarded.

The accident out of which the suit arises occurred on the 26th of July, 1902, when the plaintiff, a young man of approximately fifteen years of age, was crossing the defendant company’s right of way and tracks at a public crossing situated a short distance west of the depot at Mattoax station, in Amelia county. It appears that he was traveling in a two-horse vehicle and was driving the team himself, he being the only occupant; that he had been that morning entrusted by his father with his two-horse wagon for the purpose of driving from his home nine miles to Mattoax station, for the purpose of carrying a young lady of the family to the station, and to get a load of goods for the return trip. After securing his goods from the depot he started on his return trip, and at the crossing over which he had a short time before passed his wagon was hit hy the train in question, and he received the injuries of which he complains, which though painful were hot serious. The county road along which plaintiff was traveling approaching the crossing from the south strikes the railroad at right angles and on a level. On the right side of the crossing, at the time of the accident, was a [414]*414rick or stack of cord wood, which extended along the line of the railroad’s right of way some distance in an easterly direction.; By measurement this rick or stack of wood was about forty feet from the main line of the railroad, and there was a space between the eastern edge of the county road and the end of the rick of wood nearest thereto of at least fifty feet. The train was accustomed to pass Mattoax each day at about 3 :30 o’clock P. M., but did not stop at that station and moved at a schedule rate of about forty miles an hour. The crossing is situated about 400 yards west of the station, and it was usual and proper to sound the station signal some time previous to the crossing signal, the crossing signal being located about 100 yards east of the station and therefore about 500 yards from the crossing. On the day of the accident this train coming from Richmond passed Mattoax station about ten minutes late, perhaps a few ■minutes later, but it does not appear that it was running at a greater rate of speed than was usual in the running of a train of its character and schedule.

The plaintiff based his right of recovery on the grounds: (1) 'That the employees of the defendant company failed to blow the crossing signal whistle, as required by the statute, on approaching this crossing, or to give timely warning by the ringing of its bell; (2) that the train was running at án excessive rate of speed, instead of at from twenty to twenty-five miles an hour; (3) that the defendant company permitted the cord wood to be racked on its right of way so as to obstruct the view of per•sons approaching the track.

The statute in force when this accident happened fixing upon railroad companies the duty of giving a signal before reaching a public highway crossing, provided that the whistle should be sounded at a distance of not less than 300 yards before reaching the crossing. Acts, 18 9 3-’94, page 827. The present statute fixes a distance of not less than 300 yards nor more than 600 yards as the space within which the signal must be sounded, but the later statute has no application here. As to whether [415]*415or not the employees of the defendant company failed to give the statutory signal on the approach to this crossing where plaintiffs wagon was struck, or to give other timely warning, the evidence, as is usual in such cases, is not harmonious.

Conceding that the defendant company failed in some duty it owed the plaintiff and was, therefore, guilty of negligence, was not the proximate cause of the accident in which he sustained the injuries for which he sues his own contributory negligence? The evidence does not justify the conclusion that the crossing' is a dangerous one. The matters alleged in his declaration and testified to by the plaintiff and other witnesses in his behalf, accepted as true, established merely a condition there with respect to the view of approaching trains which at most imposed a higher degree of care alike upon the traveler upon the highway and the defendant company. The only obstruction of the view of approaching trains complained of is the rick of cord wood referred to. It was placed there by W. L. Mason, one of the witnesses for the plaintiff, upon the land of H. E. West, leased to Mason, and “partly on the railroad land.” Mason describes in detail the location of this wood, and puts it at the nearest point more than a car-length (forty or fifty feet) from the public highway, and thirty or forty feet from the main line of the railroad. His testimony in no way conflicts, with, but fully corroborates, that given by Burton Marye, civil engineer, introduced on behalf of the defendant company, who had made a map of the crossing and its surroundings, and taken measurements of the distances, etc., introduced in evidence, and by this evidence it is established that had the plaintiff looked at a point forty feet from the main line he could have seen an approaching train down the track 120 feet, and that the nearer he approached the main line the further east and down the track he could see the approaching train. That the plaintiff could have seen the approaching train from a point at least forty feet from the main line is nowhere contradicted in the record. According to the uncontradicted proof, even at twenty feet from the main track, [416]*416lie was in a place of safety. Before reaching the main line he had to cross the sidetrack, which from the evidence of his own witness is twelve feet from the main line. It is nowhere claimed that the plaintiff was not of an age and of ample intelligence to render him capable of appreciating the dangers of the crossing, if any there were. The view of the approaching train being obstructed by the rick of wood, a higher degree of care was imposed upon him, as well as upon the defendant company, than if the obstruction had not existed, the degree of caution required of both parties being in proportion to the danger caused by the obstruction. A. & D. R. Co. v. Rieger, 95 Va. 418, 28 S. E. 590; So. Ry. Co. v. Aldridge, 100 Va. 142, 43 S. E. 333.

It is true that the failure of a railroad company to sound the whistle of its locomotive in the manner prescribed by law, on approaching a highway crossing is negligence, and if a traveler on a highway is injured there is a presumption that the injury was caused by the neglect, unless the traveler’s own fault is manifest. But whether it caused the injury or not is to be determined from all the facts and circumstances in the case. 2 Wood on Railways, 1319; A. & D. R. Co. v. Rieger, supra.

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Bluebook (online)
56 S.E. 155, 106 Va. 412, 1907 Va. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-railway-co-v-jones-va-1907.