80 Va. 546 | Va. | 1885
delivered the opinion of the court.
This suit is an action of trespass on the ease against the said railroad company for the negligent killing of the deceased Charles E. Rudd, laying the damages at $10,000.
TJpon the trial in the court below, after the jury had heard all the.testimony for the plaintiff and defendant, the said defendant demurred to the testimony as being insufficient in law to maintain the issue joined, of not guilty; the plaintiff joined in the said demurrer: whereupon the issue was submitted to the jury to say, what damage the plaintiff had sustained by reason of the matters shown in evidence, in case -the judgment of the coui’t should be given for the plaintiff; and the jury, after considering the same, returned into court and rendered their verdict, to-wit: “¥e, the jury, assess the damages of the plaintiff at forty-seven hundred and fifty dollars, ($4750) subject to
And, thereupon, the court passed judgment sustaining the demurrer of the defendant to the evidence in the case, and dismissed the plaintiff’s suit with costs, etc. To which judgment the- plaintiff excepted.
The case comes up bn a demurrer to evidence, and the single error assigned, is that the circuit court erred in sustaining the defendant’s demurrer to the plaintiff’s testimony, because said testimony was sufficient in law to render the said defendant company liable for the damages awarded by the jury, by l’eason of its gross negligence, which was the proximate cause of the death of the deceased.
On the 28th day of May, 1882, the deceased, Charles E. Eudd, a boy 12 years of age, who had been sent by his parents to mind cows in a field running alongside of the track of defendant’s railroad, in Nottoway county, Virginia, was run over and killed by a train of loaded and unloaded freight cars, consisting of a locomotive and tender, and thirty-six cars, making a train about 375 yards in length, belonging to and operated upon the said defendant’s railroad, in Nottoway county, Virginia, about two miles from Burkeville, in said county, the said Eudd being at the time lying across the said track, apparently asleep. The said train being on a heavy down-grade, had, at the time of the killing, been running without steam, and of its own momentum, for a distance of one and a-half miles, and would have continued so to run for two miles farther. The said train turned around a curve in the line of the road, 1118 yards from where the boy was struck, and passed a public crossing 226 yards further on, or 892 yards before reaching the body of the boy. The boy had been repeatedly found on the track, sitting and lying down and asleep, at various times previous to the killing, and had been warned and expostulated with by various persons as to the danger of falling asleep and being run over and killed
It appears, from the plaintiff’s evidence, that an experiment made with a boy about 12 years of age, and of the size of the deceased, showed that an object of that size could be seen on the road at the distance of 1118 yards from the curve or turn in the road.
These facts present the case of contributory negligence by the plaintiff; and negligence both contributory and concurring . at the time and in the causation of the killing.
The judgment under review having been rendered upon a demurrer to evidence, the familiar and settled rule applies: that the demurrant admits the truth of all the demurree’s evidence, and all proper and reasonable inferences therefrom, and waives all his own evidence which is in conflict with or tends to establish a case different from that of the demurree’s evidence.
The plaintiff has made his own case; and the gravamen against the defendant is, a charge of gross negligence. The law will not impute it: the plaintiff must prove it.
The defendant company was in the exercise of its lawful rights and the discharge of its public duties, and was upon its own exclusive premises; while the plaintiff’s intestate was unlawfully and negligently upon the track of the defendant — not at a station, or a public crossing; but at a portion of the track where defendant had a right not to expect or apprehend any person to be — certainly not lying down and asleep.
A railroad company does not bear the same legal relation to a stranger, trespassing upon its road-bed and highway, at unaccustomed and unappointed portions of its route, as it does to ■a passenger; and, though it may not kill or injure, with impunity, even a trespasser unlawfully upon its track, at any point or in any way, if by ordinary care it may avoid so doing; yet, in the language of this court, in the case of Dunn v. Seaboard
It is undeniably true, as alleged by counsel for the appellant, that a wrong-doer or trespasser upon tbe road and tbe rights of the defendant, is not an outlaw, to be' run over, injured or killed with impunity, without the exercise of ordinary care and caution by tbe railroad company or its employees; yet, it is equally true, that railroad companies, in tbe exercise of their legal rights and duties, upon their own ground and highways, are under the protection of the law, against speculative suits, and excessive verdicts for damages, for injuries caused by the equally proximate and concurring negligence of trespassers and wrong-doers. It is admitted in the declaration in this case, that the plaintiff’s intestate was asleep upon the track of defendant’s road; and the evidence shows, that he had been repeatedly, and by sundry persons, warned of the extreme danger of putting himself in such a situation; and the declaration does not charge; that the defendant either knew of this contributory and co-operating negligence and fault of the plaintiff’s intestate, or that the said defendant intentionally inflicted the injury, or did not use all possible care and caution to avoid it, after it saw the situation and became aware of the danger. The general charge is, negligence in using and operating the said road.
The plaintiff’s own testimony, out of the mouth of his own witness, Elam Blankenship, who was the engineer running the train (and who had been for seventeen years an engineer) shows distinctly and emphatically that the defendant company used every means in its power to give warning to this boy, who was unlawfully and improperly asleep on its track, of the approaching train; and that it used every effort and appliance in its power to stop the train and prevent it from striking the boy. He says: “I was on schedule time when I struck the boy.
The case of the Richmond and Danville Railroad Company v. Anderson’s adm’r, 31 Gratt. 812, was a case very similar to the case at bar. In that 'case, a man was lying upon the track and was run over and killed by the train. Judge Burks, delivering
The experiment, made by plaintiff’s witness, of placing a boy 12 years of age, and of about the size of the deceased, in position on the track, and then being able to see him from a point of observation 1118 yards off, when they knew that he was thus placed there, and their undertaking was to see him, does not prove that the deceased, lying down flat on the track, may not have escaped the observation of the engineer, even when he was at his post and on the lookout, at that' great distance, and while the train was running rapidly along.
In the case of Dunn v. Seaboard, and Roanoke Railroad Co., supra, Judge Lacy, after reviewing all the authorities, English and American, upon the doctrine of contributory negligence, says: “It is better, we think, to adhere to the rule, already established in this court, * * * that one who is injured by the mere negligence of another, cannot recover any compensation for his injury, if he, hy his own ordinary negligence or wilful -wrong, contributed to produce the injury of which he complains, so that, but for his concurring and co-operating fault, the injury would not have happened to him; except ■where the direct cause of the injury is the omission of the other party, after becoming aware of the injured party's negligence, to use a proper degree of care to avoid the consequences of such negligence.” Tuff vv. Warman, 5 Q. B. (N. S.) 573; Richmond and Danville R. R. Co. v. Anderson’s adm’r, 31 Gratt. 812.
In Anderson’s case, 31 Graft, supra, the jury fixed the damages at $6,000; and in Clarke’s case, 78 Va. (3 Hansbrough), 709, the jury fixed the damages at $7,500; yet, in both of these cases, this court sustained the demuiTer to the evidence.
JUDGMENT AEEIRMED.