Virginian Railway Co. v. Hillsman

173 S.E. 503, 162 Va. 359, 1934 Va. LEXIS 250
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 22, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 173 S.E. 503 (Virginian Railway Co. v. Hillsman) 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
Virginian Railway Co. v. Hillsman, 173 S.E. 503, 162 Va. 359, 1934 Va. LEXIS 250 (Va. 1934).

Opinion

Browning, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The petitioner, Virginian Railway Company, is here complaining of a verdict and judgment in favor of W. J. Hillsman in an action for damages arising from personal injury.

[362]*362The facts deemed necessary to be slated are that on the morning of February 22, 1931, just after midnight, Mr. Hillsman drove from his home in Farmville, Virginia, to the railroad company’s station at Abilene, Virginia, for the purpose of meeting his daughter, who was a passenger on the company’s train, scheduled to arrive at that station about that time. The night was dark and it was raining. Mr. Hillsman had been at the station only twice before the night in question; once in the preceding September, in the daytime, and again more than a year before the night of the accident. After arriving at the station and in advance of the arrival of the train he parked his car at the rear side of the station building and awaited the incoming of the train. He and his daughter shortly thereafter started on the return trip to Farmville. Leading out from the station and over the company’s premises is a roadway which crosses a -ditch variously estimated from four to ten feet deep and quite wide, the evidence not being clear as to the exact width. This ditch was designed by the company for drainage purposes and it remained open. It was located about forty feet to the north of the station and was crossed by a culvert or bridge which constituted a part of the roadway to be traveled by Mr. Hillsman in reaching the public road leading to Farmville. This way over the culvert was from ten to sixteen feet wide, varying with the testimony. Just before reaching the culvert it is approached by a sharp curve which includes the bridge or culvert. It is built up from the bottom of the ditch by timbers with a filling of some sort between them over large drainage pipes. The evidence is in conflict as to whether the sides of this bridge or culvert were perpendicular or slanting from the bottom to the top. As Mr. Hillsman was making the turn and going on the bridge, the lights of his car being directed by the course to his right, and being guided by his lights with-his vision fixed that way, his car slipped on the left side and went down into the ditch. He testified that at first the descent was gradual and then it went [363]*363down suddenly, turning over on its side and throwing his daughter against him.

There were no lights at or near the bridge or culvert crossing and there were no guard rails or similar means of preventing the traveler, failing to negotiate the bridge way with necessary particularity, from falling into the ditch.

The plaintiff alleged injuries to his left leg growing out of the accident which permanently disabled him and the gravamen of his complaint is that the defendant was negligent in failing to maintain reasonably safe premises and conditions for the protection of those lawfully upon its property and lawfully using the same; that the ditch and bridge, under the conditions obtaining, unguarded and unlighted, constituted negligence for which defendant is properly and legally answerable in damages for the injuries he sustained.

The defendant contends that the driveway over the ditch was of sufficient width to accomodate traffic going to and from its station and that the roadway was plainly marked by travel which had worn down the cinders which covered it so that there was no hazard connected with its use and it relies upon the contributory negligence of the plaintiff in driving his car into an open ditch eight feet deep and from eight to ten feet wide without turning on his lights or without looking in the direction in which the car was being driven. It also contends that the plaintiff was not injured in the manner and to the extent alleged in his complaint.

The jury rendered its verdict for the plaintiff, assessing the damages at $1,200.00, which was sustained by the trial court. As to every important defense urged the testimony was conflicting. There was no evidence that the lights of the plaintiff’s car were not turned on and effective. The plaintiff and his daughter both testified that their lights were on at the time of the accident. The plaintiff testified that he was looking ahead and that his lights shone to the right, which was in line with the direction of the [364]*364going car making the curve movement. The lights of necessity illuminated the right side rather than the left.

The evidence is undisputed that the plaintiff approached the bridge very slowly and cautiously; that he had! not gone far enough to attain speed of any moment, indeed his car was still in low gear; that in making the turn he felt his car slipping at the left side and it went down, turning over in the descent. This, of course, hears upon the question of contributory negligence, which is for the determination of the jury when there is a conflict of evidence. Here there is abundant warrant for the conclusion that the plaintiff was operating his car not only without negligence but in the exercise of pronounced caution and care. Certainly there is no room for this court to say that he was guilty of contributory negligence as a mátter of law.

Coming now to the question of the alleged negligence of the defendant in allowing to exist a physical condition of its premises which created a situation which was dangerous and hazardous we quote a part of the testimony.

The plaintiff’s witness, Chappell, testified:

“Q. Although you never made any complaint to the railroad company, you did always consider it a dangerous place?
“A. Yes, sir, even today I consider that a dangerous place, and all my life I was very particular in traveling around there with my team and automobile, and people would have to take notice of a place of that sort, and I considered it in my estimation a very dangerous place, and it was a close drive to get around there with a team or car, hut as to the foot or inches I never had occasion to measure it, or how wide the road was, it is just estimates that I am giving you, I haven’t measured it, but I consider it a dangerous place.
“Q. You have referred to some switch ties that were laid along side this crossing. Did they have the effect of acting as a barrier or obstruction to keep a car from running over?
[365]*365“A. No, sir, they were simply thrown in there, and as these gravels worked down, they were put there to hold those cinders from going down and making the road narrower. As the banks began to slip away they throwed some old ties to keep the cinders back, but I have never seen anything there to hold a car, they simply seemed to be thrown against that bank to hold the cinders, and when you go on cinders they keep crawling like that (indicating) was just my idea about it, but I have never seen anything there that was put there to keep a car or anything from going over.
•‘Q. Did I understand you to say in crossing this bridge the back wheels of your car or wagon you felt these switch ties give?
“A. You could feel them give in that bank and the hollowness under those cinders, that has been my experience with them.”
And on cross-examination:
“Q. Mr. Chappell, do you consider your county roads, where there is a sixteen foot pipe under the culverts, dangerous ?
“A.

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Bluebook (online)
173 S.E. 503, 162 Va. 359, 1934 Va. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/virginian-railway-co-v-hillsman-va-1934.