Virginia Railway & Power Co. v. Winstead's Administrator

89 S.E. 83, 119 Va. 326, 1916 Va. LEXIS 108
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 8, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 89 S.E. 83 (Virginia Railway & Power Co. v. Winstead's Administrator) 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
Virginia Railway & Power Co. v. Winstead's Administrator, 89 S.E. 83, 119 Va. 326, 1916 Va. LEXIS 108 (Va. 1916).

Opinion

Kelly, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was brought to recover damages for the death of W. E. Winstead, which was alleged to have resulted from the negligence of the defendant, Virginia Railway and Power Company. There was a verdict for the plaintiff, and a judgment thereon which is the subject of the present inquiry.

The defendant company operates a street railway system in the city of Norfolk. On the night of the accident one of its cars, which was running eastwardly on Brown avenue, stopped at a street crossing, and, renewing its journey eastwardly, had proceeded fifteen or twenty feet beyond the crossing when the motorman and two passengers standing on the front platform saw laying by the track, some forty of fifty feet ahead, an object which appeard to be a piece of paper or some old trash. When within a distance variously estimated by the witnesses at from eight to twenty feet of the object, they discovered that it was a man, and the mo.torm.an then made the best stop he could, [328]*328but the car struck the man’s head and came to rest about four or five feet beyond. This man was Win-stead. He had been addicted to sprees, and on this occasion had a quantity of whiskey with him. The only reasonable explanation of his presence by the track was that he was in a drunken condition.

The car was equipped with two headlights, one an incandescent and the other an are lamp, which were shown to be. of standard make and in general use in Norfolk and other cities. There was no evidence to show that these lights were not adjusted and burning in the usual manner. That portion of Brown avenue on which the accident occurred was poorly lighted, and comparatively speaking was quite dark. There was a city arc light at the street crossing mentioned above, but its effect was interfered with by shadows from intervening trees. Such further facts as are material will appear in connection with our discussion of the charges of negligence upon which the plaintiff below based his claim for a recovery.

The first of these charges is that the defendant company failed to have a proper headlight, properly adjusted, on the car. There is, we think, no difficulty with this branch of the case. “An essential ingredient of any conception of negligence is that it involves the violation of a legal duty, which one person owes to another—the duty to take care for the safety of the person or property of the other; and the converse proposition is that, where there is no legal duty to exercise care, there can be no actionable negligence.” 1 Thompson on Neg., sec. 3, p. 4; 2 Elliott on Roads and Streets, sec. 1138 and notes; Id., sec. 1139. There are authorities which seem to hold that independent of statute or municipal ordinance, no duty rests upon street railway companies to provide lights or signals [329]*329on their cars at night for any other purpose than to disclose their presence and approach to other users of the streets in order that the latter may keep off of their tracks. See for example Roscher v. Railway Co., 90 Mich. 413, 416, 61 N. W. 463, 30 Am. St. Rep. 447; Buren v. St. Louis Transit Co., 104 Mo. App. 224, 231, 78 S. W. 680. We cannot assent to this view, and are of opinion that it was the duty of the defendant company to use reasonable care to equip and operate its cars on the streets of the city, with a view to discovering, and avoiding injuries to, persons using the streets in the usual and ordinary way. We are further of opinion, however, that there was no duty of prevision owing by it to persons who might, because intoxicated or for any other reason, lie down in practical disguise on or near the track. As to such persons, the only duty of a street car company is to use reasonable care not to injure them after their peril has been discovered, or would have been discovered by due care in the use of such facilities and equipment as were required by their duty, not to such persons, but to persons using the streets in some such way as was to be reasonably expected. When Winstead became intoxicated and laid down in dangerous proximity to the street car track, he placed himself out of the class of persons to whom the defendant company owed any duty of prevision, and brought his case within the reason of the decisions of this court in Tucker v. N. & W. R. Co., 92 Va. 549, 24 S. E. 229, and N. & W. R. Co. v. Dunnaway, 93 Va. 29, 24 S. E. 698. In the recent case of Washington and O. D. Ry. Co. v. Jackson, 117 Va. 636, 86 S. E. 496, a recovery was sustained, not because there was any duty of prevision owing to the decedent, but because after sufficient notice of his danger the defendant did not exercise reasonable care. [330]*330We are not unmindful of the difference between the rights of persons on a street car track or railroad track in a public street and their rights upon such tracks on a right of way owned by the company. It is unquestionably true, as stated in 2 Elliott on Roads and Streets, see. 965, that the use of a street in the ordinary way can never make one a trespasser; but we are of opinion that where one is situated as was the plaintiff’s intestate in this case, he is not entitled to any higher rights than if he were in a strict technical sense a trespasser.

To run a street car without lights, or to run it with lights but with no lookout for persons on the street, would, of course, be evidence of wanton and wilful negligence, for which even a trespasser might maintain an action; but that is not this case.

In the present case the evidence leaves no room for reasonable men to differ upon the statement that if Winstead (or any other man or child) had been standing, or walking, on of near the track where he was struck, or making any other legitimate and customary use of the street at that point, the headlights would have been entirely sufficient to disclose the fact from the point at which the object was first seen, and in ample time for the accident to have been averted. Lying as he was, however, wholly outside of the rails, he at first sight presented the appearance of a piece of paper or a bundle of trash, threatening no harm to the car or its occupants, and suggesting no probability of harm or damage to it from the car. The evidence shows that the motorman was looking ahead and would have seen a man using the track in the usual way in time to have done whatever prudence might have dictated for his protection, and that after the car was close enough to disclose the probability that [331]*331the object was a human being, the motorman did all he could to stop in time to save him. There was no duty upon him to slacken his speed sooner than he did. Tucker v. N. & W. R. Co., 92 Va. 549, 553, 24 S. E. 229; N. & W. R. Co. v. Dunnaway, 93 Va. 29, 40, 24 S. E. 698.

In the Dunnaway Case the fact is emphasized that the railway company had the exclusive right to the uninterrupted enjoyment of their tracks at the point of the accident. In this case the defendant company did not have any such exclusive right, but it did have a superior right between crossings, even as to the customary and proper use of the street by others (36 Cye. 1491, and cases cited in note 96; 2 Elliott on Roads and Streets, sec. 961); and it requires no argument or authority to show that no one has any right to use the streets on or off of the track as a sleeping place.

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Bluebook (online)
89 S.E. 83, 119 Va. 326, 1916 Va. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/virginia-railway-power-co-v-winsteads-administrator-va-1916.