110 Va. 798 | Va. | 1910
delivered the opinion of the court.
John T. Crowe was struck and killed at a late hour of the night on June 14, 1907, by a passenger train of the Norfolk and Western Railway Company, while crossing its track on the public highway, and this suit was brought to recover of the railway company damages on’account of his death. The jury on the trial rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $9,000, and the court entered judgment in accordance with the verdict.
Upon three grounds this court is asked to review and reverse the judgment of the trial court: (1) Because the verdict was
contrary to the law and the evidence; (2) because the court erred to the prejudice of the defendant in refusing to give to the jury a certain instruction offered by the defendant; and (3) because the damages awarded were excessive.
There are three counts in the declaration filed, and in the first and second counts the right of the plaintiff to recover was founded upon the negligence of the defendant in failing to ring the bell or sound the whistle on its engine as required by law; and the allegation of negligence in the third count is that the defendant also failed to have the usual and customary headlight on its engine, and that this act of negligence concurring with its alleged negligent failure to give the signals required by the statute when an engine approaches a highway crossing, caused the injury complained of.
It appears from the evidence that the deceased, a citizen of Dinwiddie county, living about five miles from Wilson station, on the defendant’s line of railway, had come to the city of Peters-
We have then in the record as undisputed facts that the deceased and his companion, Rutledge, knew well the surroundings of the road crossing, frequency of passing trains, regular and irregular, both having resided in that neighborhood for a number of years; that the night of the accident was a still night; that no wind was blowing to obstruct sound; that the train was running rapidly up-grade and making more than usual noise; that the whistle of the engine blew as it approached Wilson station, and was heard by persons four or five hundred yards just off from the crossing; and that, by the maps and photographs introduced by both parties, the view from the crossing to the station and beyond was unobstructed. Plaintiff’s witness, J. P. Dahlborn, a surveyor and photographer who made one of the maps, testified that the right of way was forty feet on each side of the railroad, and that a man standing in the county road thirty feet from the center of the crossing could see all the way to the station and beyond.
There is no dispute between counsel for the contending parties as to the law defining the reciprocal duties of a traveler on a highway approaching a railroad crossing- and of those in charge of a train approaching the same.
Considering first whether or not the court erred in its ruling giving and refusing certain instructions to the jury, we find that the plaintiff asked for and obtained, without objection of the defendant, six instructions; that the defendant asked for four instructions, the first two of which were given, and the third also, with a modification, but the objection of the defendant to the modification is waived in this court.
The defendant’s fourth instruction, which was refused, is as follows: “If the jury believe from the evidence that the injury to the plaintiff was caused solely by the failure of the defendant to have the usual and customary headlight on its engine, they
This instruction is of very doubtful interpretation, to say the least of it, and was calculated to mislead the jury, rather than to aid them in reaching a correct conclusion; especially is this true since the instructions given clearly expounded the well settled law applicable to the case; therefore, defendant’s instruction No. 4 was rightly refused.
In considering the remaining assignment of error, necessary to be considered, which present the question whether or not the verdict of the jury is contrary to the law and the evidence, we leave out of consideration, as the familiar rule governing the consideration of the evidence requires, the testimony of eight or nine witnesses introduced by the defendant, some of the highest standing as to truthfulness and veracity, who reside in the vicinity where this accident occurred, having no connection whatever with the defendant company, or interest in the result of this controversy, who testified that the account of the accident given by the plaintiff’s principal witness, Eutledge, at the trial of this case was altogether different from the account he gave of it immediately after its occurrence; his first account admitting that, both he and the deceased (Crowe) heard the train coming, and put the blame for the accident on the deceased, saying among other things that “If Crowe had listened to him they would never have had any trouble”; that “they heard a train coming a little while before they got to the crossing, and they stopped in the road.” “Well they (we) stood awhile, a few minutes, and Mr. 'Crowe was driving. Well, Mr. Crowe says, ‘Well, I reckon we can make it, and I’ll drive on’ ”; that “Mr. Crowe said he thought he had time to make it”; while the account given at the trial, and after the witness had brought and had then pending a suit against the defendant company for $15,000 damages by reason of injuries he received in the same accident, sought to exonerate himself and the deceased from all blame for the accident, and to show that it was the result of the
However, the case turns here upon the question whether or not, upon the physical facts as to the surroundings of the place where the accident occurred, appearing from plaintiff’s own evidence, the maps and photographs introduced and used by both parties at the trial, and the uncontradicted evidence given in the case, it can be accepted as true that while the witness, Rutledge, and the deceased, occupants of an open buggy, could and did see the switch lights down in the direction from which the train was coming, a distance of at least one mile, they did not see the lantern swinging beside where the usual and customary headlight of the engine belonged, nor see or hear the train coming on a straight track for the same distance, the view of which and noise it necessarily made being wholly unobstructed, which train was so close at hand that it struck the buggy occupied by the witness and the deceased, which had only moved twenty-five feet, and that, too, notwithstanding the fact that the noise of the train, as we have seen, was so loud and distinct that two of plaintiff’s witnesses, Mr. and Mrs. Bishop, in their house about five hundred yards from the railroad, with all the windows of the house down, heard distinctly the noise made by the train as it came from Wilson station past the crossing, the point of this accident, and beyond.
The witnesses on both sides who testified in relation to the matter state that the grade from Wilson toward the crossing was an ascending grade, and the county surveyor, who actually tested the grade with his instruments, stated that it was about the maximum grade of the defendant’s railway in that section of the country. It is proven also, and without contradiction, that
In such a case, when the fact testified to and the fact necessary to be proven in order to sustain the verdict of a jury could not in the nature of things be true, the authorities clearly hold that the verdict should be regarded as against the evidence, and be set aside.
This court, in Anderson v. C. & O. Ry. Co., 93 Va. 665, 25 S. E. 947, held, that notwithstanding the rule required that the case in the appellate court was to be considered as upon a demurrer to evidence, “that rule, while it may and often does require us to accept as true that which is capable of proof, though the preponderance of evidence be ever so great against it, cannot compel us to accept as true what in the nature of things could not have occurred in the manner and under the circumstances narrated, and may be said, therefore, to be incapable of proof.” See also Harvey’s Case, 103 Va. 850, 49 S. E. 481; Peters v. So. Ry. Co., 135 Ala. 533, 33 South. 332.
In the last-named case the opinion quotes from the opinion in Artz v. Railroad Co., 34 Ia. 154, 159, where, in discussing
In the recent work of Moore on Facts, the author in sec. 160, citing Hook v. Missouri Pac. R. Co., 162 Mo. 569, 63 S. W. 366, says: “Courts are not so deaf to the voice of nature or so blind to the laws of physics that every utterance of a witness in derogation of these laws will be treated as testimony of probative value because of its utterance. A court will treat that
In section 191 the same author says: ”A conclusive presumption that a sound was heard by a person is quite often applied in the case of persons at or near a railroad crossing with a train thundering down on them.”
The same author, citing a number of authorities, in a note to section 216, says: “Courts take judicial knowledge of the fact that railroad trains create a great deal of noise in their movements and that for some considerable distance such noise can be heard.”
Again, the same author, in section 221, citing ample authority to sustain the text says: “Presumption that train was heard ■—It must be conclusively presumed that a pedestrian who stopped and listened within six feet of a railroad crossing could have heard a locomotive, a train which struck him going at the rate of fifteen miles an hour. In such a case his testimony that he did not hear the train was pronounced ‘so contrary to the daily experience of common life, so, at war with the conceded and indisputable physical facts in the case, that neither courts nor juries can, without stultifying themselves, yield to it an iota of probative force or effect. It is a proposition too monstrously improbable for rational human belief. To argue to the contrary of this is to endeavor the transmutation of the impossible into possibility.’ In another case the court said ‘It almost seems incredible that a man can be within twenty feet of a railroad and not hear an approaching train, even although no whistle was sounded or bell rung.’ Again it was held that a person within one hundred feet of the track, possessed of ordinary hearing, and listening attentively with nothing to obstruct the sound, cannot fail to hear a train approaching at thirty-miles an hour.”
Elliott on Railroads, in section 1703, citing as authority decisions in several States, under the headline, “Physical Eacts,” says: “It is an old saying that ‘actions speak louder than
The contention that the failure of the defendant to give the ■statutory signals and to have the usual and customary headlight on its engine lulled the deceased and Rntledge into the belief that they could safely cross the track ahead of the approaching train, of whose approach they were aware, is neither sustained by the facts in the case nor by the authorities. See Smith's Adm'r v. N. & W. Ry. Co., 107 Va. 725, 60 S. E. 56; Southern Ry. Co. v. Hansbrough, 107 Va. 738, 60 S. E. 58.
We are of opinion that the verdict of the jury in this case is plainly against the evidence. Therefore, the judgment of the circuit court will be reversed, the verdict set aside, and the case remanded for a new trial.
Beversed.