Southern Railway Co. v. Simmons

55 S.E. 459, 105 Va. 651, 1906 Va. LEXIS 74
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 14, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 55 S.E. 459 (Southern Railway Co. v. Simmons) 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. Simmons, 55 S.E. 459, 105 Va. 651, 1906 Va. LEXIS 74 (Va. 1906).

Opinion

Keith, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

[653]*653There was a judgment against the Southern Railway Company at the suit of Simmons for injuries which he had sustained while acting as a brakeman in the service of the railway company and engaged in coupling cars at Lawrenceville. To that judgment the railway company obtained a writ of error.

The railway company demurred to the declaration and to each count, and its first assignment of error is to the judgment of the Circuit Court in overruling its demurrer.

The objection made to the first count is that it not only charges negligence on the part of the company in the employment of its servants, but negligence on the part of the servants themselves; that the negligence of the company and that of its servants constitute two separate and distinct causes of action, and should not have been combined in one count.

In Norfolk & Western R. Co. v. Ampey, 93 Va. 121, 25 S. E. 226, this court said: “The foundation of the objection to the declaration is that the first count alleges three distinct grounds of negligence as the cause of the injury sustained by the plaintiff, either of which would of itself, independently of the others, constitute a sufficient ground for the action. In other words, the claim is that the count is bad for duplicity. The grounds so stated are the negligence of the defendant in failing to exercise due care in selecting competent servants, in failing to provide a sufficient number of train hands, and in failing to supply and maintain suitable and safe machinery and instrumentalities for the conduct of the business of the defendant. They are conjunctively alleged as concurrent causes which, co-operating together, produced the injury. It is very questionable whether this constitutes duplicity. It is stated by eminent text-writers on the subject of pleading that no matters, however multifarious, will operate to make a pleading double that together constitute but one connected proposition [654]*654or entire point. But even if this count were obnoxious to the charge of duplicity, the fault could not be taken advantage of on a general demurrer. The objection for duplicity relates to matter of form only, and does not go to the substance of the pleading. Being an objection to the form and not to the substance of the declaration, it could only be availed of, even at common law, with all of its rigid rules of pleading, by special demurrer.”

This assignment of error is not well taken.

The demurrer to the second count rests upon the omission of the count to state specifically the rules, orders and requirements of the railroad company which are therein referred to, and because “the act of Congress referred to does not require the defendant, in the operation of cars engaged in interstate commerce, to employ cars provided with such couplers as will couple automatically without any necessity for brakemen ever going in between the cars. The only thing that the act required was that the couplings should be of such a nature that after they had been fixed and were ready to be coupled that there should be no necessity for being in between the ears at the time when they came together. The allegation of the count imposes upon the company a duty which the law does not impose, and is, therefore, bad on demurrer.”

We do not think that it is necessary, in a declaration where reference is made to the rules, orders and requirements of'a railroad company, that they should be set out in totidem verbis, it being sufficient to aver the legal effect of such rules, orders and requirements.

As to the second objection to the count it seems to be disposed of by the opinion of Chief Justice Fuller in Johnson v. Southern Pacific Company, 196 U. S. 1. That decision construes the second section of the act of Congress of March 2, [655]*6551893, entitled “An act to promote the safety of employees and travelers upon railroads hy compelling common carriers engaged in interstate commerce to equip their cars with automatic couplers and continuous brakes and their locomotives with driving-wheel brakes, and for other purposes.” The second section is as follows:

“That on and after the first day of January, 1898, it shall be unlawful for any such common carrier to haul or permit to be hauled or used on its line any car used in moving interstate traffic not equipped with couplers, coupling automatically by impact, and which can be uncoupled without the necessity of men going between the ends of the ears.”

It will be observed that the declaration in this case gives the very language of the act of Congress, and avers that it “was the duty of the said defendant, as such common carrier, not to haul or permit to be hauled or used on its said line of railroad any car used in moving interstate traffic not equipped with couplers, coupling automatically by impact, and which can be uncoupled without the necessity of men going between the ends of the cars.”

The railroad company made the same point in the Johnson Case that is insisted upon here by the plaintiff in error; and its view prevailed in the Circuit Court, the judgment of which, in favor of the railroad company, was affirmed in the Circuit Court of Appeals; but the Supreme Court of the United States, dealing with the subject, said: “We are unable to accept these conclusions” (speaking of the results in the lower courts), “as they appear to us to be inconsistent with the plain intention of Congress, to defeat the object of the legislation, and to be arrived at by an inadmissible narrowness of construction. The intention of Congress, declared in the preamble and in sections 1 and 2 of the act, was ‘to promote the safety of employees and [656]*656travelers upon railroads by compelling common carriers engaged in interstate commerce to equip tbeir cars with automatic couplers and continuous brakes and tbeir locomotives with driving-wheel brakes/ those brakes to be accompanied with ‘appliances for operating the train-brake system’; and every car to be ‘equipped with couplers coupling automatically by impact, and which can be uncoupled without the necessity of men going between the ends of the cars,’ whereby the danger and risk consequent on the existing system was averted as far as possible.

“The present case is that of an injured employee, and involves the application of the act in respect of automatic couplers, the preliminary question being whether locomotives are required to be equipped with such couplers. And it is not to be successfully denied that they are so required if the words ‘any car’ of the second section were' intended to embrace, and do embrace, locomotives. But it is said that this cannot be so, because locomotives were elsewhere, in terms, required tó be equipped with power driving-wheel brakes, and that the rule that the expression of one thing excludes another applies. That, however, is a question of intention, and as there was special reason for requiring locomotives to be equipped with power driving-wheel brakes, if' it were also necessary that locomotives should be equipped with automatic couplers, and the word ‘car’ would cover locomotives, then the intention to limit the equipment of locomotives to power driving-wheel brakes, because they were separately mentioned, could not be imputed. . . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 S.E. 459, 105 Va. 651, 1906 Va. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-railway-co-v-simmons-va-1906.