142 Va. 750 | Va. | 1925
delivered the opinion of the court.
Frank G. Gregory brought an action in the Circuit Court of Dinwiddie county against the Seaboard Air Line Railway Company, a corporation, to recover $5,000.00 damages for the destruction of his automobile truck in a collision with one of the defendant’s fast trains at Burgess station in that county on the 19th day of April, 1923. The jury that tried the case rendered a verdict for $2,500.00, which the court, upon motion of defendant, set aside, and by virtue of section 6251 Code of Virginia, 1919, entered judgment for the defendant. The case is before us for review of this action of the circuit court.
There was a considerable quantity of evidence submitted to the jury by both parties, but the issue for decision is in such a narrow compass, and has been argued on both sides with such ability, that it will not be necessary to detail much of the evidence but only sufficient facts to intelligently apply the law.
On December 19,1921, about 12:30 p. m., the plaintiff was driving his automobile truck loaded with staves to the crossing at Burgess station, at a rate of about four or five miles an hour, and at the same time a through express train approached the crossing from the south. Just before the plaintiff reached the east corner of the store he looked south where he could see the railroad for three hundred and fifty feet, and then continued- to look north where there were several buildings obstructing the view of the track until the front wheels of his truck were nearly upon the track, when he looked and saw the fast moving train upon him but too late to stop the truck, but jumped from it in time to save his life; the truck ran upon the track; was struck by the engine and demolished; the engine, tender and two express cars were de
The court correctly instructed the jury in reference to the duty of the defendant company to give the statutory crossing signals and that its failure to do so was negligence upon its part which entitled the plaintiff to recover if such negligence caused the damage to his truck. It also properly instructed the jury as to duty of the plaintiff upon approaching the railroad crossing to look and listen for approaching trains when and where such exercise of his senses would be effective, and that his failure to exercise due care would constitute contributory negligence.
The evidence in the case presented to the jury a case of concurrent negligence which the law as it stood prior to the enactment of section 3959 Virginia Code of 1919 would not apportion, and the contributory negligence of the plaintiff would have barred any recovery. But section 3959, supra, did not change in any way the law of negligence. Its purpose is expressed by the re-visors as follows: “This section is new, and changes the
The defendant company claims that this action of the learned judge of the trial court was warranted by section 6251 of the Code of Virginia, 1919. The section in terms provides that: “Nothing in this section contained shall be construed to give to trial courts any greater power over verdicts than they now have under existing rules of procedure.” In the case of W. S. Forbes & Co. v. Southern Cotton Oil Co., 130 Va. 245, 108 S. E. 19, Judge Burks, after reviewing the cases as to the power of courts over the verdicts of juries, enunciates the law as follows: “The cases are but typical. Many more could be added. They manifest the great respect that is accorded the verdict of a jury fairly rendered. It is not sufficient that the judge, if on the jury, would have rendered a different verdict. It is not sufficient that there is a great preponderance of the evidence against it. If there is conflict of testimony on a material point, or if reasonably fairminded men may differ as to the conclusions of fact to be drawn from the evidence, or if the conclusion is dependent upon the weight to be given the testimony, in all such cases the verdict of the jury is final and conclusive, and cannot be disturbed, either by the trial court or by this court; or if improperly set aside by the trial court it will be reinstated by this court. But with all the respect that is justly due to the verdict of a-jury, and which is freely accorded to it, if there has been ‘a plain deviation from right and justice,’ even a court-of law will not make itself a party to such a wrong by entering up judgment on it. The initial step of the trial court, that of setting aside the verdict, can only be
But for the evidence of “the roar of the train” and that the station signal was blown nearly a mile from the crossing there could be no doubt of the conclusiveness of the jury’s verdict. The legislature has made the crossing signals mandatory, and it was not for the court or jury to determine that some other warnings were equally as good. The question it had to determine was not whether one kind of warning was as good as another, but whether, under all the circumstances of the case, the defendant’s failure to give the crossing signals as required by statute contributed to the plaintiff’s injury. Atlantic & Danville R. Co. v. Reiger, supra, and Simmons v. Southern R. Co., supra.
In the instant ease the evidence of the defendant tended to prove that the crossing signals were sounded as required by statute; that the roar of the train eould be heard for nearly a mile; that the station signal was sounded about a mile from the crossing; that a person approaching the crossing could have seen the train for nearly a mile and that the plaintiff was guilty of gross negligence in not looking and listening when due care would have prevented the injury, therefore the plaintiff could not recover. The plaintiff’s evidence tended to
The case of Norfolk Southern Railroad Co. v. Banks, 141 Va. 715, 126 S. E. 662, Special Court of Appeals, page 326, was reversed because the plaintiff’s instruction did not call attention of the jury to the effect of the plaintiff’s negligence in contributing to his injury. It will be seen that the instruction attempted to cover the plaintiff’s entire case and directed a verdict upon proof of the facts therein set out, and declared the rule by which damages were to be ascertained. The principle is well settled that when this is done in an instruction, all the facts necessary to entitle the plaintiff to a recovery must be stated. We think the instruction fails to do this in more than one respect, conspicuously in directing the jury to give “such damages as will compensate him for the pain and suffering which was caused by the collision, and from damages to his automobile.” The question presented in the instant case was not before this court in the Banks Case, and the case was sent back to be tried upon proper instruction by virtue of
The eases cited, of defective appliances under Federal employers’ liability act, by counsel for defendant bear no analogy to this ease. In these cases the defect in the appliances was a condition of negligence not injurious in itself, but the negligence of the employee was the independent, efficient cause of the injury. In the case under consideration the rapidly moving train toward and over the crossing without giving the statutory crossing signals was one of the contributing causes of the injury as found by the jury, and not a condition of negligence.
In the case of C. & O. Ry. Co. v. Hall, 109 Va. 296, 63 S. E. 1007, the evidence established the fact that the deceased knew the train was rapidly approaching the crossing and never exercised her senses for her safety, therefore, her own gross negligence was the sole cause of her injury. It would seem from the revisors’ note that it was the intent of section 3959 .to change the rule of law laid down in this case. But it is not applicable to the facts in the instant ease.
There is no evidence in this ease that the plaintiff knew the express train was approaching the crossing or that he heard it before it was so near that the collision was unavoidable. Reasonable men might honestly differ as to whether he heard the roar of train and knew it was approaching, therefore, the court could not hold as a matter of law that the plaintiff’s negligence was so gross as to bar his recovery, or that with knowledge of the approaching train he heedlessly drove upon the track, and this was the sole proximate cause of his dam
The judgment of the circuit court is erroneous, and must be set aside, and judgment entered upon the verdict of the jury for the plaintiff.
Reversed.