Washington Southern Railway Co. v. Lacey

26 S.E. 834, 94 Va. 460, 1897 Va. LEXIS 96
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 25, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 26 S.E. 834 (Washington Southern Railway Co. v. Lacey) 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 Southern Railway Co. v. Lacey, 26 S.E. 834, 94 Va. 460, 1897 Va. LEXIS 96 (Va. 1897).

Opinion

Buchanan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

William II. Lacey brought an action against the Washington Southern Railway Co. to recover damages for injuries done to his person and property by the alleged wrongful and negligent conduct of the railway company at a street crossing in the city of Alexandria. Upon the trial of the cause the verdict of the jury and the judgment of the court thereon were for the plaintiff, and to that judgment this writ of error was awarded.

The first assignment of error is to the action of the Circuit Court in admitting in evidence two ordinances of the city of Alexandria, and in refusing to give the nineteenth instruction asked by the defendant.

One of the ordinances referred to provides, among other things, that it shall not be lawful for an engine or car to be run in the city at a greater rate of speed than five miles per hour; and that every locomotive run in the city shall be furnished with a bell of not less than thirty pounds weight, which should be rung during the entire time the locomotive is in motion within the limits of the city.

The other was an ordinance authorizing the Alexandria & Fredericksburg Railway Co. (to whose rights it is averred the [463]*463Washington Southern Railway Co. succeeded) to lay its tracks along Fayette street, from Hoff’s Run to the northern limits, of the city, and providing that the railway, company should, "be subject to such provisions as apply to other railroads which have been permitted to occupy streets in the corporate limits, and that the locomotive steam engines used by the company should not run at a greater rate of speed than five miles an hour within the corporate limits; that a bell of not less than thirty pounds in weight should be attached to each locomotive, and be rung during the whole time such locomotive shall be in motion within the city limits.

These ordinances were offered in evidence as a whole. The objection to them was general, and not to each separately. There can be no doubt that the general ordinance, providing how all railroad companies should run their locomotives through the city was admissible in evidence. This being so, the court properly overruled the objection, even if the special ordinances as to the Alexandria & Fredericksburg Railway Co (as to which we express no opinion), were inadmissible upon proper objection. Where evidence is offered, a portion of which is admissible and a portion not, and the objection is general, the objection must be overruled. Harriman v. Brown, 8 Leigh 697; Friend v. Wilkinson, &c., 9 Gratt. 31; Parsons v. Harper, 16 Gratt. 64; Trogdon's Case, 31 Gratt. 863, 881.

The defendant company’s instruction Ho. 19, which the Circuit Court refused to give, is as follows: siIf the jury believe from the evidence that the portion of the city of Alexandria lying west of Patrick street and north of Pendleton street consists of fields, unimproved by houses and buildings, and used for the purposes of cultivation, grazing, etc., and that streets have not been opened in said portion of th© said city of Alexandria, and if they believe that defendant’s line of railway traverses said portion of th© city of Alexandria lying west of Patrick and north of Pendleton streets, and if [464]*464they shall also believe from the evidence that Fayette street is open from Oronoco street to Pendleton street, a distance of one square, yet if they believe from the evidence that on the east side of said railway from Oronoco street to tbe city limits on the north, there are only two houses, the one known as Colross or Mason’s wall, and one other, and that on the west side of said railway between said points there are no houses, and the intervening land consists of open commons and fields used for agricultural purposes, then they are instructed that the ordinance offered in evidence by the plaintiff, limiting the speed of railway trains in said territory is unreasonable and void, and inoperative in said territory.”

The point at which the plaintiff was injured was not in the agricultural portion of the city limits mentioned in the instruction, but at a street crossing proper, within some three blocks of the defendant company’s depot in the city. Whether the ordinance of the city regulating the speed of railway trains was unreasonable, so far as it applied to that territory it is unnecessary to decide.- So far as it applied to the crossing where the plaintiff was injured, we can not say that it was an unreasonable exercise of the police power of the city for the protection and safety of its own citizens and the public generally, even if the jury had believed that all the hypothetical statements set out in the instruction were true. Before such an ordinance could be held unreasonable, and therefore void, a very strong case would have to be made. It was not done in this case, and the Circuit Court did not err in refusing to give the instruction.

The next assignment of error is to the action of the court in giving certain instructions asked for by the plaintiff.

Instructions numbered one and two were as follows:

“First. The court instructs the jury that the city council of Alexandria had full power and authority to enact and adopt the ordinances mentioned and set forth in the third and [465]*465fourth counts of the plaintiff’s declaration, and which have been read in evidence to the jury.

“Second. The court further instructs the jury that the ordinances of the city of Alexandria require that no engine shall be drawn or propelled by the defendant company over its railway tracks on Fayette street, within the corporation limits of the city of Alexandria, at a rate of speeu exceeding five miles per hour, and that a bell not less than thirty pounds in weight be attached to each locomotive, and be rung during the whole time such locomotive shall be in motion within the said limits. And if the jury believe from the evidence that the plaintiff was injured, and that such injury was the result of a failure on the part of the defendant company, or its agents, and servants, to comply with any one or more of said requirements of said ordinances mentioned in the declaration, they must find for the plaintiff, unless the jury further believe that the plaintiff’s injury was caused by his own fault in failing to use the precaution of a person of ordinary prudence and care in looking out for and listening for approaching trains.”

The objections taken to these instructions are that the ordinance referred to in the first is unreasonable with reference to the locality where the accident occurred, and was therefore void, and that the second is subject to the same objection, and to the further objection that it declares “in terms what the ordinance was, instead of leaving that instrument to the jury, who were the proper judges of its provisions as matter of evidence.”

The question of whether the ordinance was reasonable or not has already been disposed of in passing on the defendant’s instruction numbered 19.

The other objection, that the jury, and not the court, should have construed the city ordinance, is without merit. As a general rule, the construction of all written documents in evidence'belongs to the court exclusively, and there was nothing in this case to take it out of the general rule. 1 Tay[466]*466lor on Ev., sec. 43, &c.; Union Central Life Ins. Co. v. Pollard, ante p. 146; Johnson's ex. v. Jenning's adm'r, 10 Gratt.

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Bluebook (online)
26 S.E. 834, 94 Va. 460, 1897 Va. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-southern-railway-co-v-lacey-va-1897.