129 Va. 323 | Va. | 1921
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a writ of error to two judgments in favor of the Southern Oil and Feed Mills, Inc., one thereof against the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company and the other against the-director-general operating that company’s lines. The judgments were rendered in two actions at law instituted at the same time by the Southern Oil and Feed Mills, Inc., against the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company and the director-general, respectively, and both actions were tried together by consent.
The damages sought to be recovered were alleged to have resulted from an insufficient pipe or culvert under the rail
Some time prior to June, 1915, the plaintiff leased from the owners, L. F. Bain & Son, the certain building and premises in the city of Suffolk which for some years previous had been used as a warehouse for the storage of peanuts, and still earlier as a planing mill. This property, as described in the declaration and as shown by the evidence, was “near to and adjoining a certain gorge, drain, ditch and water course which forms the southern boundary of the said premises and has for all time, as far as is known, constituted a natural drain for the collection and passage of water, which flows from, over and under a large area of land in the said city of Suffolk, including the premises of the plaintiff and numerous accepted streets in said city, to-wit: Johnson avenue, Cuiloden street, Spruce street, Tynes street and Oak avenue, to, by, through and beyond the same and in an easterly direction under the tracks of the Norfolk-Southern Railroad Company,- the tracks of the Southern Railway Company, thence to the railroad right of way property of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company, through which last-mentioned right of way property said gorge, drain, ditch and water course passed before the said Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company constructed its right of way and tracks thereon.”
To be a little more specific, it appears from the allegations and. proof that the plaintiff’s property was situated immediately west of three parallel lines of railroad tracks, the first >and nearest being the Norfolk-Southern, the second the Southern, and the third the Atlantic Coast Line. These tracks had been there for twenty-five or thirty years, having been constructed in point of time in the order last above named. From the time of their original •construction until about the year 1908 the Norfolk-Southern and Southern Railroads maintained an eighteen-inch pipe
In about the year 1908 the Norfolk-Southern Railroad Company substituted a thirty-inch pipe in place of the eighteen-inch pipe under its tracks, and shortly thereafter the Southern Railway Company made a similar change. The Atlantic Coast Line, at a much later date, did the same thing, but not until after the damage herein sued for had been sustained.
These two actions were for damages sustained in four-several floods in which the water backed up on the plaintiff’s property, one thereof occurring in June, 1915; one in March, 1917; one in April, 1918, and one in June, 1918, the last two after the railroads had been taken over by the director-general.
The first assignment of error is to the action of the court-in refusing to set aside the verdict of the jury as being-contrary to the law and the evidence.
Under this assignment, the argument of the defendants is addressed solely to the proposition that the evidence is insufficient from the plaintiff’s standpoint to support the verdicts, their main contention being summed up in their opening brief, as follows: “In conclusion, it is evident that the floods of 1915, 1917 and 1918, four in number, were caused by some one of the pipes under the railroad embankment becoming stopped up by debris, etc., and, as.
It would serve no good purpose to review the evidence in detail. We have examined it scrupulously, and are fully satisfied that it was amply sufficient to warrant the jury in finding that the damage was caused by the insufficient size of the pipe line under the Atlantic Coast Line track.
The second assignment of error relates to the giving and refusing of instructions. The plaintiff asked for five instructions, all of which' were given. The defendant, Atlantic Coast Line, asked for eleven, seven of which were given, and the defendant, director-general, asked for thirteen, nine of which were given. To the action of the court in giving the five instructions for the plantiff and in refusing four of those asked for by the railroad company and four asked for by the director-general, the defendants noted a general exception, but only five of the instructions, as given or refused, are discussed or referred to in the assignments of error, and we shall confine ourselves to a consideration of the latter.
The first párt of this instruction accurately defined the railroad company’s duty in respect to the original installation of the pipe line. American Locomotive Co. v. Hoffman, 108 Va. 363, 370, 61 S. E. 759, 128 Am. St. Rep. 953. The latter part of the instruction, however, was inappropriate and misleading. To have given it would have been equivalent to telling the jury that the company’s duty was fully and finally discharged by the duly careful original construction of the pipe, unless and until the inadequacy of the pipe was affirmatively brought to its attention in some notice given by or on behalf of the plaintiff. This is not the law.
Complaint is made of plaintiff’s instruction No. 4, given over defendants’ objection, as follows: “The court instructs the jury that if, from the evidence, they believe that the direct cause of the alleged disaster was the want of proper construction of the said culvert under the tracks of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company, then they shall find for the plaintiff.”
It is said, first, that this instruction ignores the degree of care with which the defendants are chargeable as defined in the Hoffman Case, supra. It appears, however, by reference to the plaintiff’s instruction No. 5 that the court told the jury plainly “that the degree of care and foresight which the defendants should have used in constructing their culvert was in proportion to the nature and magnitude of the injury which would likely have resulted from the water being backed upon the plaintiff’s property, and it should have been that care and prudence which a reasonably discreet and cautious individual would or ought to have used for the purpose of protecting himself from injury.” This, as we understand it, is substantially the rule as to the degree of care laid down by the Hoffman Case, and while it would have been proper to have made a similar statement in instruction No. 4, there was no necessary conflict between the two, and, when read together, they constitute
Instructions 1, 2, 3 and 5, given at the request of the plaintiff, are objected to on behalf of the director-general of railroads on substantially the same ground as the second objection to plaintiff’s instruction No. 4 above. For the reasons stated in the discussion of that instruction, there was no error in giving the three here in question, and no merit in the objection thereto.
The judgments complained of are affirmed.
Affirmed.