Washington & Old Dominion Railway v. Carter

85 S.E. 482, 117 Va. 424, 1915 Va. LEXIS 52
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 11, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 85 S.E. 482 (Washington & Old Dominion Railway v. Carter) 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
Washington & Old Dominion Railway v. Carter, 85 S.E. 482, 117 Va. 424, 1915 Va. LEXIS 52 (Va. 1915).

Opinion

Keith, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The declaration in this case shows that the defendant was the owner of a certain railway running from Rosslyn, in Alexandria county, to Leesburg, in Loudoun county, Virginia. The railroad had formerly been operated by steam, but for a part of its line electricity had been substituted as a motive power. It was a postal road and the plaintiff was a postal clerk. The regulations of the United States Post Office Department provided that mail or postal cars in which the mail and mail clerks were transported, and which had a door on each side through which mail could be discharged at the different stations, should be equipped with a certain iron bar called a catcher and safety bar, the purpose of which was to enable the clerk to take the mail into the car while the train was in motion, and also to enable him to discharge mail therefrom with[426]*426out danger; and the plaintiff was engaged in the performance of this duty at the time of receiving the injuries of which he complains on December 22, 1912.

The declaration charges that it was the duty of the defendant company to use due and proper care that the plaintiff should be safely carried by said road in the performance of his duties as postal clerk, and to see that the mail car in which plaintiff was riding was so provided and operated that the plaintiff, while in the discharge of his duties as mail clerk, without negligence on his part, should not be thrown from the car, and to this end to use due and proper care to see that the iron bar intended and used as a catcher or safety bar, and which operated as a barrier across the door of the car when the same was open, and thereby enabled bags or pouches of mail to be readily discharged at the various stations along the road without danger to the clerk so in charge of the same being thrown or dragged through the door, was properly placed and fastened across the outside of the side door of the mail car. Yet the defendant, not regarding its duty, did not use due and proper care to see that the plaintiff should be safely carried as aforesaid, or that the safety bar and catcher was in proper place, or that the mail car was well and adequately lighted, maintained and operated, but through its servants, agents and employees negligently and carelessly removed said bar from said car, and failed and refused to replace said iron bar in position as aforesaid, and negligently and carelessly failed and refused to illuminate and light, maintain and operate said car as aforesaid, whereby, and as the direct and proximate result of such failure and refusal, when the said mail car in which said plaintiff was riding reached a station called Wiehle, or a [427]*427point in close proximity thereto, as the plaintiff opened the said door of the said car, and in the exercise of due .care was assuming a proper position for the purpose of delivering the mail, he was jolted, jostled and thrown from the car to and upon the ground with great force, by reason whereof he sustained the injuries for which he sues.

There was a demurrer to this declaration, which we shall not discuss, because the questions arising upon the demurrer may be more satisfactorily disposed of, we think, when we come to the instructions in the case.

Upon the plea of not guilty to this declaration, a great deal of testimony was introduced, with the result that the jury, after being instructed by the court, found a verdict for the plaintiff, upon which judgment was entered, and the case is before us upon a writ of error.

During the progress of the case numerous exceptions were taken to rulings of the court upon the admission of testimony. The first assignment of error is to the admission, over the objection of plaintiff in error, of the contract between the Post Office Department and the Southern Railway Company. The third assignment of error is to the admission in evidence of certain sections of the laws of the United States which give authority to the Postmaster-General to require certain things to be done by the railway company in connection with contracts to be- made for the carriage of railway mail under the railway mail service. The fourth assignment is to the admission of section 1179 of the postal laws and regulations. The fifth is to the same effect. The sixth is to the admission in evidence of section 21 of paragraph A, of a pamphlet issued by the Post Office Department, entitled “Specifications for Fixtures for Mail Cars.”

We find no error in the rulings adverted to, and the several assignments of error are overruled.

[428]*428The seventh assignment of error was to the admission' of a conversation between the plaintiff and an employee of the Washington and Old Dominion Railway, which was objected to upon the ground that the statements made were not a part of the res gestae, and that as admissions they did not bind the defendant company for want of authority on the part of the employee to make them. Strictly speaking, it may be that the evidence should not have been admitted, but its effect could not have been prejudicial and we do not think it worthy of serious discussion. It is, therefore, overruled.

The eighth assignment of error was withdrawn. The ninth assignment of error is without merit and is overruled. The tenth and eleventh assignments are also without merit.

This brings us to the consideration of the instructions.

There is evidence in the record which proves or tends to prove that defendant in error was engaged at the time of the accident by which he was injured as a railway mail, or postal, clerk on the route between Rosslyn and Lees-burg, in the State of Virginia; that he had been in the service, about twenty years, and had been employed upon the line upon which he was injured since April, 1896; that in the first years of his employment the railway was operated as a part of the Southern Railway, but was after-wards acquired by the Washington and Old Dominion Railway, which had installed electricity as its motive power over a part of the road. It appears that the postal car was equipped in accordance with the instructions and regulations of the United States Post Office Department; that on each side of the car there was a door through which the mail was. received and delivered at the several stations; and that across these side doors there was an iron bar called a catcher and safety bar. There is evidence which tends to prove that the car was lighted by lamps, [429]*429that the lamps were in bad condition and were insufficient and inadequate to light the car in a satisfactory manner; that the condition of these lamps had been reported; that on the evening immediately before the accident the plaintiff observed that three of the lamp chimneys were broken; that he got off the car and went to the office and asked the man in charge to send him lamp chimneys, but the chimneys were not sent.

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Related

Bulin v. Great Northern Railway Co.
201 N.W. 307 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1924)
Carter v. Washington & Old Dominion Railway
95 S.E. 464 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1918)
Lusk v. Wilkes
1917 OK 66 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
85 S.E. 482, 117 Va. 424, 1915 Va. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-old-dominion-railway-v-carter-va-1915.