delivered the opinion of the court.
On August 2, 1926, J. P. Chandler, while riding along the main street in Onancock, on the top of a loaded automobile truck, came in contact with an electric light wire which extended across the street twelve or thirteen feet above the ground. He was thrown from the truck and seriously injured. He instituted this suit against the Peninsula Light and Power Company, Inc., and the town of Onancock, to recover damages for the injuries sustained.
The declaration alleges that the power company failed to maintain its wires at the height required by
Defendants demurred to plaintiff’s declaration on the ground that it does not show that the accident occurred at a road crossing within the meaning of section 4038 of the Code of Virginia, 1924.
It is conceded that the accident occurred one hundred and fifty yards east from the nearest road crossing, or intersection.
The court sustained the defendant’s demurrer to plaintiff’s declaration and dismissed the suit at his cost. To that judgment this writ of error was allowed.
It is agreed by both plaintiff and defendants that the only question to be decided in the ease is, whether the following portion of section 4038 of the Code applies to the facts in the instant case, to-wit: “All wires fastened upon posts or poles, erected, as aforesaid, shall be placed at the height of not less than twenty feet above all road crossings.”
The defendants contend that the language just quoted applies only at road crossings, or intersections, while the plaintiff contends that the wires of the defendant company, under that section, were required to be erected and kept twenty feet above the road at every point where the wire crossed the road or street.
The ordinary meaning of “road crossing” is a place where roads cross or intersect, and not a place where a wire crosses a road. Had the legislature so intended, it could, and doubtless would, have provided that all 'wires should be placed at a height of not less than twenty feet above the road, wherever the wire crossed the road.
If, as the statute says, the wire must be placed twenty feet above the road crossing, it necessarily follows that the road crossing must be in existence before the wire is strung across the road, and that the presence of the wire is not necessary to make a road crossing.
Where the language used is clear but is not as. broad as it might have been, the court cannot give to the words used a new meaning in order to make them include that which the letter of the law excludes.
In Saville, Clerk, v. Virginia Railway & Power Co.,
In Mapp v. Holland,
In Postal Cable Co. v. N. & W. R. R. Co.,
Code, sections 4035 and 4038, inclusive, are in pari materia and must be read and construed together. Section 4035 contains the following provision: * ‘ * * but such poles, wires, cables and conduits shall not in any wise obstruct or interfere with public travel, or the ordinary.use of such railroads, parks, roads, works, turnpikes, streets, avenues, alleys or waters.”
The language just quoted from section 4035 regulates the erection of poles and wires, generally, in the public
In Knott v. Pepper,
“The courts cannot by construction supply a casus omissus by giving force and effect to the language of the statute when applied to a subject about which nothing whatever is said, and which to all appearances was not in the minds of the legislature at the time of the enactment of the law. No mere omission, no mere failure to provide for contingencies, which it may seem wise to have provided for specifically, justify any judicial addition to the language of the statute. It is not for the court to say, where the language of the statute is clear, that it shall be so construed as to embrace cases because no good reason can be assigned why they were excluded from its provisions.” 25 R. C. L., page 974.
The plaintiff relies on Weaver v. Dawson County Mutual Telephone Co.,
We find no error in the orders complained of and the same will be affirmed.
Affirmed.
