100 Va. 749 | Va. | 1902
delivered the opinion of the court-.
Emma J. Humphreys, Administratrix, brought her action in the Circuit -Court of Augusta county against the Valley Railroad Company for the recovery of damages by reason of the death of her intestate, William A. Humphreys, which she alleges was caused by the negligence of the defendant company.
At the Hovember term, 1900, t'he case was tried by a jury
• The deceased was a man 67 years of age, active, energetic, in good health, of -ordinary intelligence, in possession of the senses of sight and hearing; “a littlé deaf, but could hear an ordinary conversation.” Tor three years prior to the accident out of Which this suit arises, and which resulted in injuries to him from which he died in a few days, the deceased had lived within about 300 yards of the place where the accident occurred, in full view of the railroad, and of the surroundings of the place of the accident.
The train which struck the deceased was a scheduled freight train, with passenger coach attached, made up with the engine and tender, twelve loaded cars, one empty, and the passenger coach, and reached Verona Station, where the accident occurred, about fifteen minutes behind its scheduled time. On the afternoon of the day of the accident, October 17, 1899, a bright, clear day, the deceased left Staunton and drove in an open one-horse surrey, with his wife, along the Valley Turnpike, which for a considerable distance south and towards Staunton from Verona Station is near to, and nearly parallel with, the Valley railroad. On reaching the point where the road upon which the dwelling of the deceased is situated, and which mosses the railroad at Verona Station, intersects the turnpike, he turned into
With the exception as to the route taken by the deceased from his surrey to the point 'at which he was struck by the engine, the foregoing facts are not controverted.
Verona Station was not a regular stopping point for the train in question, hut it stopped there only on signal to put off or to take on passengers or freight, and, 'according to the evidence given by all of the defendant’s employees on the train, the Whistle was blown at the whistling post a few hundred yards south of the station, 'and the signal for stopping the train at the station, given by the Conductor from the passenger coach through the two hrakeanien on the train and the fireman to the engine-man, was answered by two short blasts of the whistle; and this is corroborated by other witnesses in the vicinity, in full view of the train, and -but a short distance away, one ’of them watching the train from a. window. On the other hand, some of the
The plaintiff, the wife of the deceased, rested her case upon her own ©videntes, that of her daughter, Mrs. Dunsmore, who was about 300 yards from the railroad, and one Faidley, who was standing at the store door facing the depot platform.
It is too well settled to require citation of authority that, if the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s intestate’s death was his own negligence concurring with the negligence of the defendant, there can he no recovery, and in the able argument 'of hex-case 'here it is frankly said: “It is fully conceded by the plaintiff that Humphreys was negligent by being on the track, without looking -and listening for the train.” This would have been true if the deceased had been struck at the crossing, but, as we have seen, he wlas struck at a point on the defendant’s track where he had no right to be, whether he got on the track near the crossing and walked down it, or stepped on it in front of the engine, and was there without taking any precautions for his own safety, for it is conclusively shown that if he had looked or listened for an 'approaching train, as it was his imperative duty to do, -he would have known of the approach of the train which struck him, in ample time to have kept out of all danger of being struck by it. He was, therefore, a naked trespasser, and the defendant, notwithstanding it may have failed to give warning of the approach of the train, owed him no duty, save and except to do all that could he done, consistently with its higher-duty to others, to save him from the consequences of his own negligent act, -after his peril was discovered, regardless of whether he was guilty of contributory negligence or not. Seaboard, &c. R. R. Co. v. Joyner, 92 Va. 354, and authorities cited. See also Wood’s Case, 99 Va. 156, and authorities cited.
In -considering the question whether or not the defendant has ■been guilty of such negligence in this respect as to render it liable for damages, it is to be borne in mind that the case is not
The contributory negligence of the deceased having been established, in fact conceded, the burden of proof was immediately placed upon the plaintiff to establish that the defendant, by the exercise of ordinary care and diligence, could have avoided injuring him after it discovered his peril. Southern Rwy. Co. v. Bruce, 97 Va. 93, and authorities cited; Washington & Southern Rwy. Co. v. Lacey, 94 Va. 460; Seaboard, &c. R. Co. v. Joyner, supra.
Arery shortly after •the deceased left his surrey he was concealed from the view ’of Mrs. Dunsmore. by a pile of ties on the side of the railroad, .and—the horse to the surrey in which the plaintiff was sitting having taken fright at the train, and run off—Taidley is the only witness examined for the plaintiff who claims to have seen the whole occurrence.
Raidley, a stranger in that locality, by occupation a painter, happened to be in the neighborhood on the occasion of this accident, and drove to A^erona Station in a buggy, hitched a't the back porch to the west of the railroad track, and walked through the store to the door facing the railroad. His statement is: “1 seen this train coming, but in the first place, I saw the old man get out of the buggy, come behind the buggy, between the buggy and the track, and walk to the track, and step on the track. It looked to me like he was going to cross over, about three feet the other side of the crane, between the crane and the crossing. He stepped upon the end of the ties, walked down about even with the crane, I suppose, and stepped over inside the track, half bent over, looking down neither to the right nor to the left, and I seen the train coming. I reckon ... it
The engineman in charge of the train, shown to be a competent and efficient employee, upon seeing the deceased leave his surrey and start towards the track, was entitled to presume that he was a person of sound mind, in possession of the ordinary human faculties, would exercise reasonable care and prudence in avoiding danger, and would not get on the track, or go so near to it as to be in danger from the passing train, without looking or listening to ascertain that he could safely do so; and, if actually on the track, would get off of it in time to avoid injury. He (the engineman.) was entitled to act upon this presumption, until it became apparent to him, as a man, exercising ordinary prudence, that the deceased was about to get upon the track or dangerously near to it, or would keep on the track, without taking the precautions required of him for his own safety. This is conceded to be tbe general rule, witli the qualification that, “if there is anything about the appearance of the person or other circumstances, indicating to the engineman that such person is not conscious of the danger,” the rule does not apply.
"With the view of stopping the train at the depot to put off passengers, the air-brakes had already been applied, and the speed of the train reduced, according to plaintiff’s witnesses, to eight or ten miles per hour’.
The statement of the engineman is that when approaching the crossing he realized that t'he deceased was getting in danger, and reversed his engine, put the air on full, put sand on the track, and gave the engine steam to resist the speed of the train. The train was on a down grade, and, the appliances for stopping it having been put in use, it was drifting. He then explains that, the air-brakes having been applied for the stop at the depot as was intended, the emergency brake could not be applied -with as
The statement of the engineman, corroborated as before stated, that be did everything in bis power to stop the train when be realized that the deceased was in danger, or ab-out to get in danger, is alone controverted by the statement of the witness Faidley, who was standing at the store door, in front of which deceased Was struck, watching at the same time the deceased and the train approaching, directly in line o-f bis vision;
It is claimed, however, that defendant’s witness, Peters, says that the train did not stop “a bit quicker than it would have stopped anyhow”; -that if the deceased had reached the point of collision “a second earlier, or the train .a second later,” the accident would not have happened. Conceding that the witness is correctly quoted, what he says is to be interpreted in the light of all that he says, ‘and it is to be borne in mind that he was testifying from the point of view of himself and eight or nine other witnesses, that the deceased approached the track diagonally from 'his surrey, bent on crossing it before the train reached him; and therefore, the witness meant that if the deceased had been a second earlier, or the train a second later, he would have ac
In no view that can be taken, even of the plaintiff’s evidence alone, aided by just inferences to be drawn therefrom, can it be reasonably claimed that the deceased should -have been regarded by the engineman as being in a position of danger until he stepped over between the rails, and continued to walk down the track. Then the train was mot over thirty yards from him, and, according to the witness, Taidley, claiming experience in such matters, it required fifty yards by sanding the track to stop it.
Stress is laid upon the statements of Barrett and Denton, expert emginemen, introduced in rebuttal by. the plaintiff, as to what effect upon the deceased the sounding of the whistle would have had. The sum and substance of what the second-named witness says is in answer to the question: “In your opinion, if the whistle had been sounded,, what would have been the result?” and his answer is: “Well, sir, I could not say; I am no prophet; but it naturally would call the man’s attention, if he is not deaf and dumb, and would cause him to step off to one side or the other. I don’t know what would have been the circumstances in this case. This- is a very natural thing to suppose. That is what the whistle is there for.”
The witness, Barrett, after stating that his experience had been that when a person was on the track and the whistle was sounded, he would jump to one side of the track, was asked: “Do you think that ón that occasion, under those circumstances, if the whistle had been sounded, the man would Have jumped off?” and his answer was: “I am not a prophet, but I think he would.” It is manifest that these answers of the witnesses are predicated upon the deceased being upon the track, and not knowing of the approach of the train. But, as we have seen, all
The witness Harnett also says: “In the case that gentleman was in, I mean the engineer, I believe he did everything he could to stop. I believe that he gave a fair, square statement, and that he did everything that he could do, except sounding the alarm whistle.” The utmost to which this witness goes as to whether the train could 'have been stopped before it reached deceased is that if the train, at the crossing, was going at four or five miles an hour, and the engine in perfect condition, “it would have stopped about where it struck the man,” but “if it was going at eight miles, it would have gone much farther.”
Hrom the uncontradicted proof, the conclusion cannot be escaped that the deceased knew that the train was approaching, and under these circumstances, even if the expert witnesses -had said that the sounding of the alarm whistle would have caused him-to have gotten off the track, it would have been nothing more than conjecture. The omission to sound the alarm whistle does not constitute such negligence on the part of the defendant as to justify a recovery in this case, unless it is shown that such omission was the proximate cause of the injury complained of.
“In an action to recover damages for an injury inflicted through the negligence of the defendant, the burden is on the plaintiff to prove the negligence alleged, and the evidence must show more than a mere probability of negligence. It is not sufficient that the evidence is consistent equally with the existence or non-existence of negligence. There must be affirmative and preponderating proof of the defendant’s negligence.” N. & W. Rwy. Co. v. Cromer, 99 Va. 765. In that case, it was held that the trial court erred in refusing an instruction which told
In Southern Railway Co. v. Bruce, 97 Va. 92, Bruce, the deceased, was a licensee walking upon the track of the defendant company, and it was contended, -as in this case, that the failure to sound the alarm whistle after the deceased had been seen, or ought to 'have been seen, by the engineman in charge of the train, to be in a perilous position, rendered the defendant company liable in damages; but the contrary view was taken. It was said in that case that the deceased neither looked nor listened for the train, ... so engrossed in thought upon other matters that he was oblivious of what was going ón around him, and that, too, when he had needlessly placed himself in a position of danger by walking upon the railroad track, when he could just as well have walked in the open space by it, where he would have been safe. The track itself warned him of danger. Being conversant with the railroad track . . . and its surroundings . . . yet pursuing his journey upon the railroad track, with his thoughts evidently fixed upon some other subject than that of his own safety, or the danger of his surroundings, he so contributed to his injury as to preclude a recovery therefor, even if there was negligence on the part of the defendant company.
What was said in that case applies with equal force to the case at bar. See also N. & W. Rwy. Co. v. Wilson, 90 Va. 263; Marks v. P. R. R. Co., 88 Va. 1; Hogan’s Adm’r v. Tyler, Receiver, 90 Va. 19.
Upon a careful consideration of the evidence in this case, the conclusion cannot be escaped that the deceased, going to the store in the depot for his mail, “walking tolerably quick” or '“going at a pretty good lick,” as plaintiffs witness states it, knew the train was coming, and intended to get off the track, -or
The deceased, by his own negligence and recklessness, directly and proximately contributed to the act which resulted in his death, and we see nothing in the evidence to warrant the conclusion that the employees of the defendant, after his peril was discovered, negligently failed to do all that could be done to avoid the injury to him.
It follows that there is no error in the judgment of the Circuit Court, and it is, therefore, affirmed.
Affirmed.