Wood's Administratrix v. Southern Railway Co.

52 S.E. 371, 104 Va. 650, 1905 Va. LEXIS 145
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 7, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 52 S.E. 371 (Wood's Administratrix v. Southern Railway Co.) 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
Wood's Administratrix v. Southern Railway Co., 52 S.E. 371, 104 Va. 650, 1905 Va. LEXIS 145 (Va. 1905).

Opinion

Buchanan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was brought by the personal representative of J. Buckner Wood, deceased, to recover damages for the death of his decedent, caused as alleged by the negligence of the Southern Eailway Company.

Upon the trial of the cause, the defendant company’s demur- . rer to the evidence was sustained, and judgment rendered in its favor. To that judgment this writ of error was awarded.

There was evidence tending to prove that about 10 o’clock on the night of February Y, 1904, one of the defendant company’s freight trains from Alexandria, arrived at Monroe, a station on the defendant’s road in Amherst county. The train was to be placed on a siding there, and the engine taken to the round-house. The front brakeman on the train not being acquainted with the switches at the station, the plaintiff’s decedent, who was a yard brakeman, was ordered by the yardmaster to assist in “putting away” the train, and was engaged in that service when he lost his life.

The train came in from the Forth on the main track, and, after passing the depot, was switched to another track where the engine and tender were cut loose from the cars. The engine and tender proceeded over another switch to the main line, and were backed down that track with the intention of getting on the “lead” track through another switch so as to get to the round-house. As the train went south over the main line, and [652]*652before the engine and tender were cut loose, the deceased lit a “fusee”, which makes a flaming red light and burns about ten minutes, and stuck it in the ground to give warning to an approaching train from the south. After the engine and tender had been cut loose, and as they were backed north on their way to the round-house, the deceased picked up the lighted fusee, and with his lantern got on top of the tender of the engine and sat on.its rear end, holding the fusee in his hand to signal the engineman, and to give warning to the train approaching from the south, and another which was expected from the north.

The position of the deceased was a proper one for the duties he had to perform.

When the engine and tender reached the switch over which they had to pass to reach the “lead” track, it was the duty of the deceased to throw or change the switch. As the engine and tender approached the switch, and were within a hundi’ed or a hundred and twenty-five yards of it, running at the rate of about twelve miles an hour, the deceased was seen sitting on the “manhole” on the rear end of the tender by the engineman, as he turned to shut off the steam and slow down his engine so as to go in on the switch. There was some slight hitch in reversing the lever and slowing down the engine, and when the engineman again looked in the direction his engine was backing he did not see the plaintiff’s intestate, but took “it for granted”, as he testified, “that he had gotten down and later would throw the switch.”

As soon as the engine stopped, the attention of the engineer was attracted by the action of the'car inspector upon the track over which the engine and tender had just passed. The engineer got off his engine and went back to the car inspector, where was found the dead body of plaintiff’s intestate.

. The car inspector, who was following after the engine, came first upon the lamp of the deceased, then the “man-hole” [653]*653cover, and, a little nearer the engine, upon the dead body of the deceased, all between the rails of the track. The cross-ties and ballast between the ties showed that the man-hole cover and the body of the deceased had both been dragged some distance.

The man-hole, npon the cover or lid of which the deceased was sitting when last seen alive, and immediately before his death, is located in the centre of the rear of the tender, in a line with the top of the ladder leading np and down the rear end of the tender. The man-hole cover is about forty inches in length and twenty-one inches in width, oblong in shape, is made of iron, and has upon it an iron hand-hold parallel with the rounds of the ladder referred to above, and of about the same diameter, located on the side of the cover nearer the end of the tender; and the cover is fastened to the tender by hinges on the side next to the engine. It was the common practice of brakemen and others passing over the tender to use the hand-hold of the cover for the purpose ,of pulling themselves up on the tender from the ladder, and in letting themselves down the ladder. The location of the hand-hold was such that it was convenient and inviting, as well as in common use for those purposes, and there was nothing else by which a person ascending or descending the ladder could as conveniently and safely catch hold of. The hand-hold was also used fox raising the man-hole cover to put water into the tank, and that was most probably its primary use.

About thirty miles from Alexandria, on the run from there to Monroe, the man-hole cover slipped when one of the brakemen caught hold of the hand-hold in coming up the ladder and getting on the tender from the rear. The hinges of the cover when; found on the track after the accident were broken, one hinge showing a fresh break and the other an old break which [654]*654Was rusty and Rad tlie appearance of Raving been made some time before. When botR Ringes were in proper condition, there was no danger of the cover slipping or breaking loose by the use of the Rand-Rold in getting off or on the tender at the rear.

The contention of the plaintiff is that the proximate cause of the accident, which resulted in her decedent’s death, was ■ the failure of the defendant to exercise due care in keeping in a reasonably safe condition (the man-hole cover, the hand-hold of which the deceased was using, and had the right to use, in performing his duty at the time of the accident.

' The contention of the defendant, as to the negligence charged, is that it is not proved that the. plaintiff’s intestate had the right to use the hand-hold in getting off the tender; or, if he had, that he was so using it in the performance of his duty when he fell from the tender and was killed.

The evidence not only tends to prove, but the jury if the . case had not been taken from them'by the demurrer to the evidence, might properly have found, that one of the hinges of the man-hole cover was broken, and that it had been broken for so long that the defendant knew, or could by the exercise of reasonable care have known of its condition. The jury might have further found, even though the primary use of the hand-hold on the man-hole cover was to raise it for the purpose of putting water into the tank, that it was the most convenient and safe way for brakemen and others to get on and off the tender by way of the ladder at the rear end of the tender, and that it was their common practice to so use it, without objection by the defendant; and since it did not prohibit such use (which probably would have seemed absurd), it ought, therefore, to have exercised ordinary care in seeing that it was in a reasonably safe condition for such secondary use. Coates v. Boston, &c. R. Co., (Mass.) 26 N. E. 864, 10 L. R. A. 769; McIntyre v. B. & M. R. Co., (Mass.) 39 N. E. 1112.

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Bluebook (online)
52 S.E. 371, 104 Va. 650, 1905 Va. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woods-administratrix-v-southern-railway-co-va-1905.